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Choose Your Own Adventure!

I used to love Choose Your Own Adventure books, and the fact that that's far from a unique statement is less of an indictment of me and more of a testament to how amazing this giant collection of you-shape-the-stories was/is.

It feels nearly pointless to describe what they were, but assuming that there is even a single reader who never soaked in a CYOA book at some point, it worked like this: Read a page or two, and you'd be given options as to what the book's star character should do next. If you wanted to do "Action A," you turned to "Page X." If you wanted to do "Action B," you turned to "Page XX." Rinse and repeat that for many pages, and what you had were these great, strange little stories with multiple endings, ranging from the mediocre to the ultra-happy, and even including a few where poor decisions caused your character to die in horrible ways.

The novelty of turning books into games notwithstanding, CYOA titles could be equally championed for the broad range of eerie and awesome topics they covered. In one book, your character attended a Halloween party in a house that may or may not have been filled with flesh-eating monsters. In another, you ran marathons with the Abominable Snowman. There were plenty of titles with lighter themes, but I always viewed the CYOA franchise as being my first introduction to "unsettling reading."

If you forced me to pick a favorite, I wouldn't have much trouble. Meet Gorga!


Gorga, The Space Monster was one of the "young reader" CYOA books, with more pictures, less pages and increased spacing between letters. I picked it up from the Troll Book Club during grade school and read it no less than 15,000 times. The story involves a young boy who finds a car-sized, three-eyed purple space monster in his backyard, which grows larger and larger throughout the book. Depending on which "actions" you chose to take, Gorga would be portrayed as everything from a befuddled pet to an out-of-control, planet-destroying maniac.

There wasn't a definitive strategy involved with finding your way to one of the "good endings." Not that it mattered much: If you ended up with a bad one, all you had to do was flip back to the original page and pick the other action. (Technically, this was cheating, but who was going to admonish you? Gorga? Gorga was paper; he couldn't do shit.) Despite your decision-making process adding up to a crapshoot, it was still smart to avoid actions that seemed to be in bad taste:


This trick didn't work universally, but more often than not, being a "nice kid" usually paved way for happier endings. In the case shown above, hitting poor Gorga over the head with a log brought forth an abrupt ending in which the monster...well, ate you. The "abrupt bad ending" was the worst thing that could happen to a CYOA reader. It was like walking into a Goomba on Level 1-1.

Happier endings involved the lead character successfully keeping Gorga safe from gun-toting officials, but in a way, I preferred the vaguely horrific bad endings. When I sat on Gorga's back and flew him safely into space, yeah, I did good, but I didn't really think about the story after closing the book. When something bad happened, it stuck with me for a little longer. See below.


I wouldn't say that I actively sought out bad endings (I wanted to "win" more than I wanted Gorga to eat me and my family), but when you're a kid and you're just entering the wild world of books that aren't 85% pictures, this kind of creepy stuff has a lasting effect.

The Choose Your Own Adventure series was enormously successful. Debuting in 1979 and still running today in some form or another, it's amassed hundreds of titles with several printings. Course, I don't want you to mistake this entry as a random tribute to CYOA, as I'm really only here to point to the obvious deity that is Gorga the space monster. I loved him!


Purple, porcine and triple-eyed, Gorga was easy to draw and fun to color. And, in one version of the story, he grew large enough to eat a passenger train. These are the traits of something worth sacrificing a live chicken to. Gorga deserves at least one Google hit that sends people to something other than a used book storefront, and if it's my destiny to make that happen, I can now retire with my head held high.

Posted by Matt on 01/31/2008. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 183 comments

I had an aunt who worked at Hastings, so I had dozens of these things with the covers torn off. My favorites were “Daredevil Park” and the one with the little alien sphere that wanted to go on Wheel of Fortune, but would occasionally melt your brain with ultrasonics if you took the wrong path. I also remember a surprisingly dark one where your school bus was hijacked by terrorists and you were taken to a cave and brainwashed. Especially the ending where you hid on the bus instead of being taken with the rest of the kids, and the terrorists pushed the bus into a deep pit to hide the evidence. Good times.

Chestnuts roasted by Jedoc @ 01/31/2008 1:56 PM


I love these things. Waaayy back in Junior High, my friend and I would attempt to come up with our own, but we early on realized the logistics of it were a bit much. He owned a Commodore home computer, and tried to write a Doctor Who one, but still, at the time, keeping track of all the branches was pretty daunting. Later, though, at the class Christmas party, he got me a real DW Choose Your Fate book. It involved a giant fusion reactor, Omega taking overe The Doctor’s TARDIS, a ’56 T-Bird convertable, and K-9. I also found a CYOA-type book called Wizard & Warrior: Curse of the Wolf Knight, written by R.L. Stine. After the intro to the plot, you choose to be either the Wizard, and choose a few spells from the back of the book to use through the adventure, or the Warrior, and carry an assortment of weapons, also cataloged in back. Depending on what you have, the outcomes vary quite a bit. In both books, which I still have, some of the outcomes depend on chance happenings like coin flips, dice rolls, or whether you’re reading on an odd or even day.

I ought to go haunt some thrift stores and find some old CYOA books just for my own amusement. And, I think, there may be a site or two that has a couple of the books online to read/play though. And a site that has a try-to-survive-New York story that’s fun.

Chestnuts roasted by kingklash in a Choose Your Own Socks Adventure! @ 01/31/2008 1:56 PM


I resolve to use the phrase PURPLE IS THE COLOR OF THE INSIDE OF GORGA’S MOUTH atleast once today.

Chestnuts roasted by Dr Worm @ 01/31/2008 2:12 PM


In Primary School, when I was about 9 or 10, the teacher actually had us make our own CYOA book. We started out with a huge sheet of card each where we drew branch diagrams for each option and eventually wrote our own little stories for the other kids to play.

I wrote one about zombie ninjas in our village, as I was really getting in to both zombies and ninjas at the time. My CYOA didn’t have any real good endings, but it did have a heck of a lot of bad endings and choices to be made. I had the second longest book, but I wrote much smaller than the other kid.

I even still have some CYOA books, I know for definite I have Freedom Fighter and a Star Wars one.

Chestnuts roasted by Guise @ 01/31/2008 2:13 PM


As much as I loved the CYOA books, I graduated into the “Fighting Fantasy” series … same idea but you play with a sheet of paper, pencil, and two dice and get to battle things and collect treasure and items. Such awesome precursors to the computer games I still play now.

Chestnuts roasted by Nick @ 01/31/2008 2:15 PM


Ah I miss CYOA… And the troll book club!

Chestnuts roasted by Cat the Vampire Slayer @ 01/31/2008 2:16 PM


This is the girl who cried watching Aeris die in FFVII, so playing CYOA was kind of a challenge.

I had a few, but the one I can remember… it was actually a pretty bad (as in NOT GOOD) one about some hillbilly town in which the cops were corrupt and it turns out the whole town is related so they all try and skin you alive or something.
I can actually say I read all the pages.
At one point I was so sick of choosing crappy endings and subsequently chucking the book aross the room in a fit that I started marking the pages that I read, so I couldn’t make the same mistake.

Let me tell you, that book only had 5 good endings- the rest of the time you died in a shootout or drowned in toxic waste or died of hunger in a mine… Not COOL.

cliffnotes: me and CYOA do not exactly call each other friends.

Chestnuts roasted by kittymao @ 01/31/2008 2:32 PM


I absolutely adored anything related to Choose Your Own Adventure. I had some Dungeons & Dragons books along the same lines too.

On a technology note, CYOA books have been made into iPod-navigated audiobooks! I tried out a free trial when they first hit, and it worked pretty well. More information can be found at chooseco.com.

Chestnuts roasted by Geoff @ 01/31/2008 2:34 PM


I don’t know if I had the “official” Choose Your Own Adventure books, but I did have the Goosebumps equivalent. And I’m pretty sure, in classic Goosebumps style, they contained nothing but horrible, gruesome endings.

Chestnuts roasted by Xemnu the Titan @ 01/31/2008 2:49 PM


Last time I playes Super Mario Brothers, I totally walked into that Goomba!

Chestnuts roasted by DarkSideofBrightness @ 01/31/2008 3:06 PM


I liked those books but not to the obsessive point. One year for Christmas my brother got a set of four GI Joe CYOA books which were awesome! Man, I loved those. Probably can’t find ‘em anymore, but I guess I was just a sucker for anything of a licensed material. Better than having to envision new characters, that’s for sure.

Chestnuts roasted by Myke @ 01/31/2008 3:22 PM


Count me among those too wimpy to make it through a CYOA book. However, I did start making my own in fifth grade. I made about seven, and they were all extremely silly, even in the methods of death:

“You walk down the dairy aisle of the supermarket. Suddenly, a cow moos so loud at you that you explode.”

Later on I made interactive Apple II versions of those books. And many years later, I made an “interactive story” on my site that was just as absurd. I couldn’t find it again without doing a search, so I don’t think I have it linked anymore. It’s been a while since it’s been touched, but if anyone wants to play, click my name. Oh yeah, and there are many endings with supersonic moos that kill you.

Chestnuts roasted by Mars @ 01/31/2008 3:32 PM


I like CYOA books as a kid a lot, but I hated the bad endings with a passion, especially in the baseball one I owned. I would always convince myself that the action I had chosen should’ve been the correct one.

I was also a notorious, keep one finger on the original page incase things don’t go as planned-er.

Chestnuts roasted by Brentantation @ 01/31/2008 3:33 PM


I’m really not sure why every book isn’t a CYOA.

Chestnuts roasted by dohopoki @ 01/31/2008 3:38 PM


dohopoki: Hah, yes. I’ll be first in line to buy the CYOA version of Moby Dick.

To set sail aboard a doomed ship captained by an obsessed one-legged madman, turn to page 5.

To allow you hypos to get the upper hand of you, deliberately step into the street, and begin methodically knocking people’s hats off, turn to page 22.

To say “Blow that for a lark” and go find some decent nachos and a pint, turn to page 463. Bring the purple dude, he looks like he’d be a blast drunk.

To read that really uncomfortably homoerotic bit, turn to page 350.

Chestnuts roasted by Jedoc @ 01/31/2008 4:08 PM


CYOA books were great. I had more than my fair share of them as a kid, but I can’t remember any specific stories. Since so many of you can, I am a bit disappointed in myself.

Someone already mentioned it earlier in the responses, but Encyclopedia Brown was also pretty fantastic. I do remember at least one of those stories.

Aside from stealing my father’s horror and sci-fi paperbacks (imagine a 4th grader attempting to read Stephen King’s IT), the series of books that I loved the most was The Hardy Boys Casefiles. I read those books religiously for a couple of years, and definitely had at least the first 20 or 30 books in the series. They were numbered sequentially on my book shelf and they were one of my prized possessions. I wonder if they are packed away in a box somewhere in my parent’s basement. I really hope they weren’t sold off, book-by-book, for a dime apiece in a garage sale. That would make me sad.

Woo-hoo! I found a Wikipedia article dealing with the Casefiles series, and it appears each individual book as its own details page. Well, I know what I’ll be wasting two hours on later tonight.

Chestnuts roasted by Magic Toy @ 01/31/2008 4:20 PM


I was definitely a Choose Your Own Adventure cheater. I always left my thumb on the previous page in case I died or some other stupid shit happened. And I dunno how many people have already seen this but i couldn’t believe this when i saw it. The Mr. Belvedere fun kit!

Chestnuts roasted by phunqsauce @ 01/31/2008 4:29 PM


My fiance has been getting into those Lone Wolf and Way of the Tiger books, which are sort of like CYOA, but are really more like a pen-and-paper RPG. Apparently, they’re pretty hard to play through to the end.

I want some of those Nintendo CYOA books. Those look rad.

Chestnuts roasted by Annette @ 01/31/2008 4:40 PM


Lone Wolf kicks ass!!! IMO the best CYOA out there(albeit a bit on the RPG side as mentioned above)! Its awesome that they are going back into print. I’m gonna have to go dig out my originals now and play a few!!

Chestnuts roasted by Loneman1 @ 01/31/2008 5:06 PM


The only one I have (still have, omg) and read was the Atlantis one. Yeah. Its still in my room, I should go read it for the hell of it. XD The endings in it were almost evenly spread between:
1) dying a horrible death
2) getting a pretty neat ending
3) getting an ambiguously bad ending that MIGHT be good.

Wait…no, it was split between 1 and 3 evenly, w/ 1 or 2 good endings. There were tentacles involved too. Maybe this book was batter than I remember. I sure wish I could have read the Gorga one tho. I remember Matt’s other quick review of it too.

Chestnuts roasted by Dio and Lex @ 01/31/2008 5:14 PM


I received a CYOA book from my cousin’s mom, while my mom gave my cousin a MOTU action figure. I got angry.

Chestnuts roasted by JRH @ 01/31/2008 5:21 PM


Reading through the comments really bring back memories of how my elemntary school really considered CYOA books to be the work of the devil. I forgot about that. Hell, at least we were reading.

Chestnuts roasted by Bill @ 01/31/2008 5:34 PM


I once went through a Choose Your Own Adventure book on my LiveJournal. It was set in Nazi-occupied Austria. I tried one set in apartheid-era South Africa, but that didn’t really take off. I might try again.

They’re a lot of fun.

Chestnuts roasted by Molly @ 01/31/2008 6:01 PM


Magic Toy, 4th Grade is 9-10? It was around that time I started reading Stephen King as my Primary School was running low on books I hadn’t read. Pet Semetary was the first I read. By the time I got to Secondary School, I was blitzing books and getting in trouble for getting ahead of parts of the class for required reading.

Chestnuts roasted by Guise @ 01/31/2008 6:03 PM


Speaking of goombas on 1-1, some of my favorite CYOA books as a kid were these officially licensed Mario Brothers adventures. I don’t really remember them too well, but I know I had at least a few of them. I can only assume that the adventure involved a kidnapped princess that needed rescuing from a certain, spike-shelled dragon turtle (what the heck is Bowser anyway?). I seem to recall picking them up at a local dollar store when I was 10 or so. Good times.

I had one! It was one involving Luigi rescuing Mario, with either the main villain or one of them being Wendy O. Koopa. Poor Luigi whenever he died.

Chestnuts roasted by Invader Norbert @ 01/31/2008 6:21 PM


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