What games do you enjoy playing on other 8bit computers

Anything relating to non Sinclair computers from the 1980's, 90's or even before.
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DouglasReynholm
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Re: What games do you enjoy playing on other 8bit computers

Post by DouglasReynholm »

Killa Gorilla, Transistors Revenge and Daredevil Dennis on the BBC Micro are ones I remember from my youth when my half brother used to visit with his Beeb in the mid-late 80's. Still fire them up in the browser sometimes.
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Vampyre
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Re: What games do you enjoy playing on other 8bit computers

Post by Vampyre »

As much as I love the game on the good ol' Speccy (and it was criminally underrated at the time of release IMO), the C64 version of Impossible Mission is an 8-bit masterpiece. Everything about it oozes quality. Sound, graphics, animation, playability. All 10/10.
ZX Spectrum Reviews REST API: http://zxspectrumreviews.co.uk/
MtM
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Re: What games do you enjoy playing on other 8bit computers

Post by MtM »

uglifruit wrote: Tue Sep 15, 2020 12:17 am (Snip)

Alter Ego - C64. (1986) An oddity this one. A series of multiple choice questions, framed as a personality quiz. It's funny, thought provoking, and possibly quite sad. I can't decide if it wants to be taken seriously, or it's gloriously taking the P?s? out of self-help/personality tests. Nonetheless I do enjoy it. Spend 15 mins with it, see if you like it.
Yes! Alter Ego is a phenomenal piece of 8 bit software. There is still something very moving about taking a character from being a new
born baby all the way through to dying at the end an old person. As best I recall, there is nothing like this anywhere else,
other than the Apple version of course, written by Peter J Favaro (PhD) - it is a fantastic experience. I remember it blowing
the minds of the ZZAP!64 reviewers, who gave it a gold medal, and it was deserved.

http://www.zzap64.co.uk/zzap13/alter_ego.html

Not a tour de force of programming, simple text menus etc., but it is like the psychological text version of The Sentinel -
nothing else ever been like it, not even sure if
you call it a game, but it draws you in rather like life. Might be fun if someone did a Next conversion of it - I for one would pay for it ;-)
Pity the author never did anything else that I am aware of. Hopefully they retired on the money they made from it, but I
doubt that some how.

Definitely worth trying if you have never played it before, fire up a C64 emulator and give it a go. You can save your game too
on it.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alter_Ego ... ideo_game)
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Alessandro
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Re: What games do you enjoy playing on other 8bit computers

Post by Alessandro »

MtM wrote: Tue Sep 15, 2020 10:11 pmMight be fun if someone did a Next conversion of it
This is the first time I see someone on this forum, or in any Spectrum-related website I know of, hoping for a conversion for the Next of a game that does not exist for the historical Spectrum(s), yet it would be perfectly feasible for it, as this Alter Ego seems to be.

A sign of the times, maybe?
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Re: What games do you enjoy playing on other 8bit computers

Post by MtM »

Alessandro wrote: Wed Sep 16, 2020 5:15 pm
MtM wrote: Tue Sep 15, 2020 10:11 pmMight be fun if someone did a Next conversion of it
This is the first time I see someone on this forum, or in any Spectrum-related website I know of, hoping for a conversion for the Next of a game that does not exist for the historical Spectrum(s), yet it would be perfectly feasible for it, as this Alter Ego seems to be.

A sign of the times, maybe?
Hmm, I hadn't thought of that aspect really Alessandro, it was a bit of a throw away remark, but based on the Next's
larger memory - Alter Ego was disk only on the C64, so it would make sense for a Next version, but in truth I think
it could be converted to the the 128k Spectrum too with compression involved. It would not work as a multiload
from tape really, unless maybe you broke the game in half, each a separate load.

I think too that what motivated it was the need for good software on the Next, and Alter Ego is just that, and as
I say, it was not a lot of technical wizardry hitting the C64 h/w directly, just menus and icons and text - it doesn't even
have any sound at all in it, which may seem crackers for a C64 game, but it really doesn't need it. This is the kind of
game you play whilst listening to the soundtrack of your life. Doesn't really feel
like a game, but its power to engross is as strong as anything I have ever played. If you have never played it it really is
worth trying. I write this in the belief that whilst we are all clearly Spectrum fans here, a lot of us love other old machines
and games too, and it would be remiss to think that there are some brilliant games on the C64 that could live on in
the Spectrum as well, so in a way all fans of old machines uphold this notion with the support they show for their chosen
hardware and software.
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