Robert Rothman wrote:
My guess is that there have to be a certain number of people like me out there: that is, old-timers who have spent most of the past two decades lamenting the demise of Infocom, and then have been pleasantly surprised to learn about the "new" IF being written. In addition, the availability of Inform 7 opens the door for people like myself to try our hands at writing our own. My guess would be that the effect would be an increase in the amount that gets written and played, as compared to five or ten years ago.
I'm not sure if I'm an anomaly, but I'm among those who aren't old-timerish enough to properly appreciate Zork and Planetfall (both of which I've played, albeit briefly). There may be much about IF's basic conventions that remains the same, but still, it's the advances and the maturation of the medium that drew me in.
Without Inform 7 (or TADS 3), I doubt I'd felt ready to get on the train. Nowadays, given the appearance of browser-based gaming, the use of Inform 7 in classrooms, the release of Aaron Reed's book etc, it would surprise me to not see a rising interest.