==Story== After striking it rich beneath Surbiton, Miner Willy thought himself the luckiest man in the world. He had a grand house built to his specifications, threw wild parties several times a week, dined in the most exclusive restaurants, and cruised the tropics in a luxury yacht. It seemed he had only to imagine something to have it brought to him on a silver tray. So when Maria the housekeeper finally snapped and demanded that her employer clean the house himself for once, Willy was surprised to find that he rather relished the challenge. The mansion proved to be larger than he had thought, and there were plenty of hazards in its less frequented passageways. It reminded him of his mining days: difficult, dangerous work, but ultimately rewarding. After that, relapsing into listlessness, Willy decided to amuse himself by playing outrageous practical jokes on his equally rich jet-set pals. He had Sir Kenneth's favourite Rolls-Royce fitted with an array of powerful magnets so that it hovered out of reach above the driveway. He arranged for Marcus Winterbottom's indoor swimming pool to freeze over mysteriously in the middle of July. And he hired a huge team of decorators to paint Lord Gregory's stately home from top to bottom with Montagnolo. (Lord Gregory couldn't stand cheese, especially blue cheese.) Willy's friends soon tired of his practical jokes and decided to repay him in full by anagramming his house: that is, changing every room into another room made from the same set of letters, so that "The Bathroom" might become "The Ram Booth". Maria heartily approved of the prank and promised not to help Willy sort things out (literally) for anything less than 223 flashing items. Still sleeping off the effects of a butler's pantry's worth of wine, Willy was unaware of the sounds of demolition and construction around him... ==Hints== * Although every room has been anagrammed, the general structure of the house has been left intact. If you remember First Landing being below Top Landing, you shouldn't be surprised to find "Daft girl's inn" below "God in plant". * "Death; no reascent!" might be an anagram of "Entrance to Hades", but it's not the one Willy's friends chose. In this anagrammed house -- unlike the original -- you can go to Hell and back. * In addition to the 60 anagrammed rooms, there are four secret rooms whose entrances are carefully disguised. These rooms are attached to the outer edges of the original map, each in a unique direction: up, down, left, or right. Players are urged to discover the secret rooms by trial and error, without any dirty hacking. Kari is watching you. ==Credits== "Jet Set Willy" was designed and programmed by Matthew Smith in 1984. "It's Wet Jelly" is a version modified in 2008 by Paul Equinox Collins, who anagrammed the room titles, music, and game messages (including the introductory scrolling message) and designed a new set of rooms and guardians to match. The following sprites are taken from other sources: Willy, Maria, the bird, the chef, and the evil god (from the original "Jet Set Willy"), the bee (from "The Birds and the Bees" by Adrian Sherwin and Matthew Smith), and Kari Krisnikova (from "We Pretty" by Andrew Broad). Matt Westcott and Wayne Marsh provided some ideas, Andrew Broad and the "manicminerandjetsetwilly" Yahoo! Group offered technical help, and John Elliott developed the JSWED program in which the game was edited.