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Plot your own adventure type ebook version of a paper one (without scoring) more or less works on all common Kindle reflowable formats and any epub format as long as the ereader has some method to select links.
The oldest Interactive Fiction ebook I know is Adventure 101 on Sony EBG format (mini-CD), which runs on the Sony DD1ex and later (1991!) and will run on DOS if it has a CD drive that can take a 8cm CD. The EBG disc easily pop out of the caddy. It even has graphics. A drawback of the format compared to ANY ebook reader using Flash, ever, is there is no bookmark/memory, so you have to make a note on paper and search.
The old mobi / Kf7 Kindle format even has an extra HTML mobi specific tag, not in HTML3, to block you paging forward so you have to pick one of the decision links. I've not investigated how that would be done in epub2 or epub3 that would be generally compatible.
It's more general interactive and multimedia that will fail on most eink. Amazon had a format for a while and abandoned it. There is a point at which an iOS/Android app created with a framework is more sane than interactive multimedia epub3, but an epub3 title is less likely to get orphaned without support. Apple particularly kills store listings that are not updated and older Android apps might not run on newer Android even if still in store.
Edit:
The Sony Data Discman models existed 1990 to 2000 in Japan and about 1991 to 1994 in the West. They could have had a static RAM and coin cell like some Psion models and cartridges, but didn't. Commercial NAND Flash existed from about 1988, but would not have been economical for bookmarks / CD locations.
It's a failing of almost all CD players that they are poor for Audio books compared to cassette due to having no non-volatile storage for bookmarks or last location. Most DVD/BD players have limited location memory.
In theory I could convert the EBG mini-CD of Adventure 101 to epub/mobi/azw3 etc. There is a library to read the format and you can open the file in an editor that copes with binary and see the ASCII content. The images are 1bit uncompressed, though a later format may have had more levels. One colour model existed.
Last edited by Quoth; 10-27-2025 at 04:18 PM.
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