Nord and Bert Transcript

This transcript is not from Nord and Bert Couldn't Make Head or Tail of It, but it does show some of the strange things you can do in the game. It shows a few simple puzzles and their solutions, and it will give you a good idea of how this game works. The player's commands appear in capital letters after each prompt (>).

YOUR BEDROOM

[You can go:HALLWAY]

As dawn breaks through the window above your head, yet another day of your youthful existence is illuminated. And so is the wreck you call your bedroom. Suddenly, the alarm clock to your right explodes to life, ending any hope of additional sleep.

>TURN OFF THE ALARM CLOCK

As you lunge for the offending timepiece, you knock it off the night table along with a lamp and a tepid glass of water.

>GET OUT OF BED

Your foul mood requires a more specific strategy.

>GET UP ON THE WRONG SIDE OF THE BED

You do a slow roll off the left side of the bed, which in this case is actually the right side of the bed since the right side of the bed is awash in a sea of jagged glass and alarm clock parts.

>LOOK

This is your bedroom. It is a homogenous mass of everything that is you rolled up into one big disorganized ball. There is an open door leading to the hallway.

>HALLWAY

[You can go:BEDROOM,KITCHEN]

This is the upstairs hallway of your home. There is a door leading to the bathroom. The door is closed and there seems to be some muffled sound coming from behind it.

>LISTEN TO THE SOUND

It is the sound of your younger sister in the shower singing one of her beloved punk rock anthems, all of which you despise. You know from years of experience that your sister's showers are long, drawn-out affairs and that she has at least seven more punk rock anthems to sing before the final rinse.

>KITCHEN

You trundle down the stairs and follow the smell of breakfast to...

>KITCHEN

[You can go:HALLWAY,STUDY,STREET]

This is the kitchen of your home. A note resting on the table is impaled by a golf tee on the green of the Formica table top.

>READ NOTE

the note is folded in half and is therefore unreadable.

>TAKE NOTE

The tee holds the note firmly to the table.

>TAKE TEE

You grasp the tee and give it a series of mighty tugs but, as with Excalibur, it will take more than muscles to extract the tee from the table.

>TEA

The golf tee is swallowed up into a huge divot which then dissolves, leaving in its wake a steaming cup of oolong tea. Resting beneath the cup of tea is the note.

>TAKE TEA

Taken.

>READ NOTE

[Taking the note first]

"Hey kiddo! I'm off to work early this morning to make an 8:30 meeting with the boss. I made you a cup of tea just the way you like it. I didn't have time to mail my tax return before I left, so I need you to put a stamp on it and get it into the mailbox before 9:00 AM!

Remember, if that return isn't mailed by 9:00 today, the IRS is going to come over here and repossess our new swimming pool. What will you do all summer then?

I know I can count on you, buddy. See you tonight.

Love, Dad"

>LOOK AT WATCH

Mickey's big hand is on the nine and his little hand is on the eight.

>STUDY

You enter your father's private sanctum. Better known as...

STUDY

[You can go:KITCHEN,STREET]

This is your father's fashionably decorated study. A large roll-top desk purportedly once owned by Andy Warhol dominates the room. The tax return is nowhere in sight. You notice one of the heavy velvet curtains moving suspiciously.

>LOOK BEHIND CURTAIN

Searching behind the heavy curtain you find a stranger.

>LOOK AT STRANGER

The stranger is tall with long hair going in all directions. You notice that he is wearing a tee-shirt with the letters IRS printed on it. Is this one of your sister's weird boyfriends? If so, the kindest thing that can be said of him is that he's male.

>STRANGER, HI

The male shifts nervously on his feet.

>MAIL

The stranger's eyes start to glow and with a sudden violent spasm he collapses into a large manila envelope (proving that this probably is one of your sister's beaus).

>TAKE ENVELOPE

You pick up the hefty object.

>LOOK AT IT

The envelope is addressed to the Internal Revenue Service in your father's inimitable scrawl. You notice that there is no postage on the envelope.

>DESK

All you can tell is that the roll-top is closed.

>OPEN THE DESK

You roll back the top, revealing a clutter of papers and a stone lamp.

>L AT PAPERS

You ruffle through the papers and come across a memo regarding his parking space. You put down the memo after noting this useless information.

>G

You ruffle through the papers and come across a memo announcing the annual company trip to see the Red Sox. You put down the memo after noting this useless information.

>LOOK AT THE STONE LAMP

This is a beautiful Mayan oil lamp that your father smuggled out of Central America.

>LIGHT THE LAMP

You know there haven't been any matches in the house since your kid brother tried to set the dog on fire.

>LONE STAMP

The ancient Mayan relic flattens and its edges become perforated, leaving a lone stamp.

>GET THE STAMP

You take the stamp. It commemorates the Mayan innovation of indoor lighting.

PUT STAMO ON ENVELOPE

(I don't know the word "stamo")

>OOPS STAMP

Done.

>I

You have a manila envelope and a cup of oolong tea. There is a stamp on the envelope.

>LOOK AT WATCH

Mickey now claims it's 8:58. Better hurry or it's no more laps for you.

>GO TO STREET

STREET

[You can go:STUDY,KITCHEN]

This is idyllic Idlewood Street. On the sidewalk stands a mailbox. Your house rises majestically in back of you, a paean to suburbia. In the background your sister's singing disturbs the peace of the neighborhood.

Down the street you see the familiar right-hand-drive mail truck manned by your friendly postman, who looks suspiciously like Jack Nicholson.

>PUT THE ENVELOPE IN THE MAILBOX

You deposit the key to your summer of fun in the sun into the gaping maw of the mailbox. And not a moment too soon. As the postman pulls up and empties the box he looks at one of the envelopes and says, "Hey, isn't this one of your sister's boyfriends?

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This page was freely adapted from Peter Scheyen's excellent Infocom Site