Text D. COMPUTER GAMES.

Computer games are becoming more and more popular- some say too popular. But where do they come from? How do they work? Ruth Gates investigates for CLUB.

Battle with an alien spacecraft. Win the World Cup for your country. Use your skill and cunning to find your way through ancient castles. Yes, this is the exciting world of computer games! It's not all about violence: there's a game to suit everyone, from problem-solving to sports, and more and more are appearing in shops, cafes and clubs. The most popular game last summer was World Cup 90 , a realistic football contest for two players. You choose your international team and, using your skill and tacktics, control your team to win the Cup. If football isn't for you, you could join the Turtle, or test your driving skill in Hard Driving.

Few people know more about computer games than Jon Ritman, a well-known British programmer. He has written Match Day, a football program. Batman and Head Over Heels- both arcade adventures. So how does Jon write a computer game?

It takes a lot of careful and logical planning. At first he doesn't know what the characters or story will be. You think of the type of game you want to write and then find a stop,'. It could be sports, an adventure, anything. Then you have to work out each section of the game very carefully. Computers are like children - you have to give them very careful instructions so they know what to do.

Each instruction is very simple. It is the combination, in a very long list, that makes footballers score goals and spacecraft fly in computer games. This list of commands is what people refer to as a 'program'. The computer understands it in the form of numbers, but there are different languages through which human words are translated into numbers for the computer. Sometimes the instructions tell the computer to show something on the screen. The screen has hundreds of little dots on it which are called pixels. Each pixel has a number that means 'red' and the number so that the computer can recognized it. If you give the computer the number that means 'red' and the number of a dot it will make that dot red. Repeat instructions like this thousands and thousands of times, and you have a computer game. It's as simple as that!

Vocabulary:

Cunning- cleverness

Programmer- someone who writes the list of instructions for computer

Arcade- indoor area where people pay to play on lots of games