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Favourite Spectrum/C64/Amstrad games

knock

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These are my favourite ZX Spectrum games from when I was a wee nipper. I'm ignoring the really famous ones, like Jet Set Willy, or Spy Hunter. Those are your cocaines and your weeds of the speccy game scene, everyone's played them, everyone knows them. I'm talking about the PIHKAL and TIHKAL of speccy games here, the obscure but fascinating platform games and text adventures that pushed the boundaries of 8-colour graphics and 1-channel sound. I'm sure there is a link between exposure to the bright-coloured, pixelated graphics of retro games and a taste for psychedelics; similarly losing yourself in a text adventure is a bit like losing yourself in a dissociative trip. And the link between EDM and BEEP commands is obvious.

Brian Bloodaxe

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This was my favourite platform game. You played a viking and had to solve little puzzles involving different coloured keys and had to avoid man-eating toilets, but the best thing about it was you could use bombs and detonators to blow walls away and get into hidden rooms. Great fun. After you had waited five minutes for it to load, it simulated the computer crashing, so you thought your tape was fucked and started crying until the little message came up on the screen to tell you it was joke. Bastards! Then it played the Monty Python theme throughout which was another great touch.

Death Chase

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This was a motorcycle game where you had to avoid trees by going left or right. No brakes or throttle. The trees look more like brown pens with green caps. The longer you avoided the trees, the more trees appeared. It was pretty mindless but kept me amused for hours.

3D Space Wars

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The first "shoot-em-up" I played. The enemy were called the Sideabs, which I'm sure the imaginative programmer got from side A and side B of the tape it came on. The alien craft started as a blob in the centre of the screen and got bigger and bigger and you could move your "cross-hairs" only painfully slowly. You got more points if you shot them before they got to full size, I think there were only three or four steps from blob to full size. For some reason my brother made me eat dry spaghetti while playing this.

Red Moon

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Not my first text adventure, but my first Level 9 adventure. I loved text adventures, and Level 9 ones were amazing, the descriptions were atmospheric, but left enough to the imagination that I created my own version of the world inside my head as I was playing, like a good read should do. I usually took advantage of the option to turn the graphics off in these games so my imagination had free reign, I never solved any text adventures, but I did spend hours drawing maps of how the rooms interlinked, which could sometimes be quite complicated as going west then immediately east did not always leave you where you started. I can't actually remember what you were supposed to do in Red Moon but it was fun.

Avalon

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This was touted as a breakthrough in gameplay, full 3D animation (yeah right). You were some kind of wizard who did that yogic flying thing, floating about in the lotus position, and you wandered around a maze of rooms, floating away from baddies, finding different objects and stuff. I played it for ages but I never really knew what I was doing. The instructions were pages long, and I think they left a few things out just to piss me off. You can see in the screen-shot that the Spectrum suffered from something called "colour clash" which meant that the colours of different characters on the screen kept fucking up. That's why the baddie is half green half blue, and the wand in the wizard's hand has gone green because the wall in the background is green.

Lord of the Rings

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Another text adventure. I hadn't read Lord of the Rings before I got this, but it actually came with the book which was really cool. It had a few quite novel features, you could switch between controlling the four Hobbits (Frodo, Pippin, Sam and Merry), so they could all be in different places doing different things making for quite an involved game. It only covered Fellowship of the Ring. I actually completed this one (I lied earlier)! I spent WEEKS on it and loved it. Again, you could turn the graphics off (you can see why...).

I could go on, but I would love to know what your favourite 80s home computer games were! I'm hoping there are enough oldies out there to get a thread going...

By the way I was a Crash reader, Zapp! readers are dicks.
 
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spent days on Spy Hunter , i remember the arcade version as well that u could sit in , my favourite.
Daley Thompsons joy stick destroyer was cool as well.
my memory ain't great but these 2 stick out as does oh fuck it was a side on space shooter R \type thats it .
|Robocop was good.
i had a Vic 20 n later a C64 . but i would borrrow my mates Spectrum in exchange 4 my c64, as well.
i'm sure theirs many more but i need a bit of a jog.

The last console i really enjoyed was my SNes , not really a Gamer as such.
Although i was livin in the States when Street Fighter came out n it was Fookin massive.
I could complete it on 1 credit piece of piss when i got back 2 the UK.
 
Yeah I played Daley Thompson's Decathalon too, I never had a joystick though, so it was pressing N and M over and over again to run. Pretty sure it destroyed keyboards too...

Screenshot of the long jump from the Spectrum version:

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I think Hypersports was better though, used to love the skeet shooting.

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Certainly the sound was better on Hypersports. The Spectrum could only play one tone at a time (before the 128 came out), but they developed a technique of rapidly switching from one tone to another and it would trick your ear into thinking it was playing chords. Sounded pretty cool when I first heard that.
 
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Can I just say that I love this thread? Took me straight back.

Daley Thompson - I think that was reposnible for more cases of RSI than wanking ever has been.

I got landed with an Amstrad CPC6128 (with the shitty 3" floppy drive and green monitor, so I was jealous of everyone with a Speccy or a C64. I dimly recall having a Sinclair ZX81 around, but it was already an out-of-date piece of crap then.

In fact, it's this bitterness that made the unsavoury bastard I am.

Keep 'em coming. :)
 
Jet Set Willy.

Also Daley Thompsons Decathlon, used to put a yellow Kinder Egg plastic thing on our fingers so we could "slide" between the Mand N keys quicker.

Road Rage.

Sport of Kings.

And we used to spend hours on a fruit machine game.
 
I'll never forget the poorly-digitised speech on my Amstrad version of Robocop. Still, seemed impressive back then.

"Svvvvvvvvv the public trvvvzzzt

Prvvvtect the innocent

Uphold the lwwwvvvvvvv"


Great times.
 
I got landed with an Amstrad CPC6128 (with the shitty 3" floppy drive and green monitor, so I was jealous of everyone with a Speccy or a C64. I dimly recall having a Sinclair ZX81 around, but it was already an out-of-date piece of crap then.

The Amstrad was actually better technically than the Spectrum (just not as cool :p), but green screen monitor?? What kind of evil parents did you have? And could you not plug it into a TV?

I never played Robocop but it must have been popular. If you'd had a colour monitor then it would have looked like this on your Amstrad:

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compared to this on the Speccy:

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(I actually quite like the minimalist, bare-bones look of Spectrum games compared to the full colour splendour of the Amstrad and Commodore)
 
Law of The West. Original badboy game!

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The premise of the game was to go around picking fights with Mexicans, shooting robbers, and picking up hoes using the power of smooth talking. One of my favorite things to do was to chat up a hoe until she was smitten, and then when she turned around to walk away, pull out the six shooter and bust a cap in her ass.
 
The only game I remember fully for the C64 was "Bogeyman".
But yea, I was a young(er) one with an Amiga 500, and one game I remember loving was called "Chrome" - You played a Chrome ball in a platform format, exploring this strange, purple-skied landscape, avoiding dem badman dem ;)
Loved that.
Also remember "Porsche Challenge" :)
 
^ Screenshots are not obligatory but are welcome!

33Hz's talk of smiting hoes reminds me of Sam Fox Strip Poker, I didn't come across it (ooer) personally but I remember reading reviews. Seems a bit mental now. Actually it seemed a bit mental then.

Samantha_Fox_Strippoker-Screenshot-3.jpg


Phwooarr
 
The Amstrad was actually better technically than the Spectrum (just not as cool :p), but green screen monitor?? What kind of evil parents did you have? And could you not plug it into a TV?

My 'parents' were truly evil, but that's another story. Take A Break isn't interested though, sadly.

Anyway, once it was apparent that I wasn't going to become a computer-programming meal ticket for my mother (remember this was the eighties and 'computers' were The Future) and was just using it to play Matchday 2 (classic) then further accessories were not forthcoming. A tragic life.

I sometimes borrowed my mate's adaptor to plug it into a TV, plus his tape deck, as games on those bloody 3" disks were hard to come by. You're right about the technical superiority (and the graphics could indeed look glorious in colour), but my status as an Amstrad kid put me just above the really unfortunate children with (shudder) BBC Micros. Explains a lot. Maybe.

Incidentally it'd be good to conduct a study on convicted murderers of our generation and see which home computer (if any) they had. My money's on the BBC being the outright winner. :D

Just remembered this, which always puzzled me as a kid. What the fuck was Emlyn 'Crazy Horse' Hughes doing in that game? Tenuous Question of Sport link, perhaps?

Now Emlyn Hughes Soccer we can understand, but there must've been some crappy licensing deal between him and some software house, whereupon they wrung every dirty penny they could out of 'good' Old Emlyn.

Not sure if it was this one or another game, but I recall that Emlyn's pixellated face appeared in a small box and his expression would change according to your level of success / failure in the game. Which was not only profoundly irritating but downright bizarre.

Must've been Thatcher, Reagan, AIDS and the constant threat of 'The Bomb' that did it, but the trees of the eighties produced some strange fruits indeed.
 
You always knew a game was going to be shit if there was a celebrity or TV tie in! Some exceptions to that rule but not many. It reeked of the software houses having run out of ideas.

BBC owners were always going on about their "sideways ROM" and had about two games in their collection, both rubbish. I think Elite was the only good thing to come from that world.

Oops sorry jancrow!
 
^ Screenshots are not obligatory but are welcome!

33Hz's talk of smiting hoes reminds me of Sam Fox Strip Poker, I didn't come across it (ooer) personally but I remember reading reviews. Seems a bit mental now. Actually it seemed a bit mental then.

Samantha_Fox_Strippoker-Screenshot-3.jpg


Phwooarr

In the early 2000s my mate and I found this 'gem' on a Spectrum emulation package thing he bought for about a fiver.

I challenged him to have a wank over it, which he duly did (though not, may I add, in my presence). I thought it was an impossible task, but then I never was a Sam Fox fan. Turns out I underestimated his capacity to get aroused by ultra-low-res images.

Had it been the Maria Whittaker one then I may have considered it less of an impossible task. Ahem.

Still, video games haven't really moved on much at allwhen it comes to their portrayal of women, have they?
 
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