NAME¶
dopewars - drug dealing game
SYNOPSIS¶
dopewars [OPTIONS] ...
DESCRIPTION¶
dopewars is a ncurses- and GTK- based drug dealing game based in New
  York, with you as the drug dealer striving to become filthy rich. It supports
  network play and single-player games.
OPTIONS¶
Valid commandline options:
  - -b, --no-color, --no-colour
 
  - "black and white", i.e. do not use pretty
    colours
 
  - -n, --single-player
 
  - Do not connect to any available dopewars servers
 
  - -a, --antique
 
  - Antique dopewars; stick as close as possible to the
      functionality of the original version.
 
  - -f, --scorefile=FILE
 
  - Specify a file to use as high score table (defaults to
      /var/games/dopewars.sco)
 
  - -o, --hostname=ADDR
 
  - Specify a multiplayer hostname
 
  - -s, --public-server
 
  - Run in server mode. (Note: see the -A option for
      configuring a server once it's running.)
 
  - -S, --private-server
 
  - Run as a "private" server (do not report to the
      metaserver)
 
  - -p, --port=PORT
 
  - Specify the network port to use
 
  - -g, --config-file=FILE
 
  - Specify the pathname of a dopewars configuration file
 
  - -r, --pidfile=FILE
 
  - Specify the pathname of a PID file to maintain while
      running as a server
 
  - -l, --logfile=FILE
 
  - Write log messages to the given file (rather than standard
      output)
 
  - -A, --admin
 
  - Connect to a server running on localhost, for
      administration
 
  - -c, --ai-player
 
  - Create and run a computer player
 
  - -w, --windowed-client
 
  - Force the use of a graphical client (GTK+ or Win32)
 
  - -t, --text-client
 
  - Force the use of a text-mode (curses) client (by default, a
      windowed client is used when possible)
 
  - -P, --player=NAME
 
  - Sets the default player name
 
  - -C, --convert=FILE
 
  - Convert a high score file used by dopewars-1.5.1 or earlier
      to the format used by more recent versions
 
  - -h, --help
 
  - Display a help screen
 
  - -v, --version
 
  - Output version information and exit.
 
AUTHOR¶
This manual page was written by Leon Breedt <ljb@debian.org>, for the
  Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). Additional updates by Ben
  Webb <benwebb@users.sf.net>.