Wolfenflickr is a Flash-based implementation of Castle Wolfenstein that decorates the castle's walls with random images pulled from any Flickr stream (or any Flickr tag). Shooting Nazis and looking at snapshots: two great tastes that taste great together. Wolfenflickr (via Wonderland)

  • A New Challenger

    Technically, it’s not actually Wolfenstein 3D, but a very similar looking 3D maze based on it.

  • kaiza

    But if I strafe along the wall pressing “open” will I stumble in to rooms filled with mature content?

  • gabrielm

    Technically, the pixels are made of light.

  • gabrielm

    Technically, the light is made of photons.

  • eustace

    Technically, that content would be “immature” :)

  • Thorzdad

    Whatever it’s made of, it’s teeny-tiny and sloooowwwww.

  • Cpt. Tim

    technically you should look at my sweet ass photos of zombies invade san francisco a couple of weeks ago

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/captaintim/sets/72157606775063165/

    do it on a wolfenstein wall, or you know, however.

  • JJR1971

    Reminds me a little of the Medal of Honor mission where you have to rescue stolen Nazi art out of some cave tucked away high in the Austrian alps…that was a tough one.

    I had the original Wolfenstein on my Apple II+, and played Wolfenstein 3D on friends’ computers when it first came out. It would be cool to find a Flickr stream featuring actual artworks stolen by the Nazis during the war, or stuff from the “entartete Kunst” (Degenerate Art) exhibit put on by the Nazis in the 1930s…

  • Jack Caesar

    The best thing about this is the picture of food from one of my favourite places to eat: St John Bread and Wine in Spitalfields

  • Deadmeat

    Technically, it’s a Flash-based implementation of Wolfenstein 3D (1992).

    Castle Wolfenstein was created in 1981.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolfenstein

  • jseidelin

    Technically, it’s also not a Flash-based implementation since it’s just pure JavaScript and DOM.

  • doktor tchock

    Technically, it’s made of pixels.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pixel

  • Jayel Aheram

    I am surprised no one is complaining yet about their photos being “stolen” and being displayed “without permission.”