summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRyan Beltz <[email protected]>2015-03-04 19:55:59 -0500
committerRyan Beltz <[email protected]>2015-03-04 19:55:59 -0500
commit9a78bd20960e51dd501c2e93b50562bb7e2e6b46 (patch)
treecc355760f631afc11d606abf10c6923a3fddba62
parentf00f79ac87eac7de17aaf5225b064b3ef2af120e (diff)
parente1ee47cf1c51d97e9e9764d3d3815955e3611a96 (diff)
downloadhistacom-9a78bd20960e51dd501c2e93b50562bb7e2e6b46.tar.gz
histacom-9a78bd20960e51dd501c2e93b50562bb7e2e6b46.tar.bz2
histacom-9a78bd20960e51dd501c2e93b50562bb7e2e6b46.zip
Merge pull request #11 from TheUltimateHacker/master
Try playing Survive the Day, there's actually an ending!
-rwxr-xr-xwindows 95/Survive The Day.vb7
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/windows 95/Survive The Day.vb b/windows 95/Survive The Day.vb
index 5c34498..e9fe2ee 100755
--- a/windows 95/Survive The Day.vb
+++ b/windows 95/Survive The Day.vb
@@ -525,6 +525,13 @@
Button1.Text = "Watch TV"
Button2.Text = ""
Time.Text = "Time: 6:35"
+ ElseIf Status.Text = "Watching the Evening News" Then
+ Status.Text = "Running to Room"
+ story.Text = "You quickly and quietly run up the stairs to your room. When you make it to bed and lay down, you hear many noices, such as blazing fires, electrifying lightning, thunder, mundane explosions, and more. You slowly drift to sleep hearing these noices. Congratulations, You have survived the day! Thanks for playing!" & vbNewLine & vbNewLine & "Please download WebChat 2001 and tell 12padams this password: star"
+ Button1.Text = "Restart"
+ Button2.Text = "Quit"
+ Button3.Text = ""
+ Time.Text = "Time: 12:00"
ElseIf Status.Text = "Church Disscusion" Then
Status.Text = "Morning Weather Report"
story.Text = "On tv a man on the morning weather report looks very confused. He looks like he is following instructions from somebody behind the camera quickly changing what he was going to say. He begins talking ‘Today started off mostly sunny but it looks like the weather is changing rapidly and some rain is to be expected by the end of the day.’ He then points to a weather chart shocked at the speedy changes. ‘Today marks the fasted change of weather ever recorded’. This is then followed by a few experts trying to examine the weather changes."