OXO

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OXO (or Noughts and Crosses) is a player vs. computer Tic Tac Toe game which was written by Alexander S. Douglas in 1952 for the one-of-a-kind EDSAC computer at the University Of Cambridge. The single-player "game" was designed for academic purposes — Douglas used OXO on the famous EDSAC to study the "Interactions Between Human and Computer".

File:Oxo 9602.jpg

Like electronic Nim, electronic OXO wasn't designed to be entertaining.

OXO was the first digital graphical game to run on a computer, and was rather simple to use — the player played against the computer, with output displayed on the computer's 35×16-pixel cathode ray tube. The source code was short, yet played a perfect game of noughts and crosses.

The game didn't have widespread popularity, though, mainly because the EDSAC was a computer unique to Cambridge.


This game provides examples of: