Author: GN Team - Published: 20 April 2019, 1:53 pm
Zorro is a cinematic action-adventure created for MS-DOS by Capstone Software and released in 1995.
The game represents an attempt to bring the Prince of Persia mechanics to the settings of the fictional hero created by Johnston McCulley and set during the times of Spanish California.
For some strange reasons, all attempts to develop good videogames based on Zorro failed miserably, and this one is no exception. However, since many asked for this game, and since it's quite fun to see Prince of Persia wearing the mask of Zorro, we decided to publish it. Remember, when the pupil is ready, the master will appear.
Read MoreAuthor: GN Team - Published: 16 April 2019, 1:28 am
Cauldron II: The Pumpkin Strikes Back is a horror platformer created by Palace Software and released for the Commodore 64 in 1986. The game was also ported to ZX Spectrum and Amstrad CPC.
This brilliant adventure/platformer is the sequel to Cauldron, one of the most popular titles for the C64 at the time. The designer, Steve Brown, together with the coder Richard Leinfellner, decided to take inspiration from the first title and continue the plot, but change the gameplay drastically. The main character is now a magic pumpkin, that bounces on the screen like a ball. This unusual game mechanic was a brave move for the developers, considering that the hardware of the 8-bit computers didn't allow complex calculation. Still, in the end, it was a winning move.
Read MoreAuthor: GN Team - Published: 13 April 2019, 2:08 pm
Formula 1 Masters is a Formula One managerial sim created by Amivision and published by ESP Software in 1994 for the Amiga.
Today we would define it as an indie game since it was created by two people only: Stephen Rennocks (concept and programming) and Nick Stephens (graphics). The game was built in AMOS BASIC, an easy-to-use programming language designed to develop games.
Formula One Masters is a low-budget game but is an attractive sim for motor racing fans, especially the ones with some nostalgia for the Grand Prix of the '90s.
Read MoreAuthor: GN Team - Published: 12 April 2019, 1:44 am
Center Court 2 is a tennis game created for Amiga with an AGA chipset by Gernot Fritsche in 1996-1997 but released only in 2016.
The game, written in Blitz BASIC, was supposed to be the sequel to Center Court (aka Blitz Tennis), but the Austrian coder stopped working on it when it was almost ready.
Many years later, in 2012, an English Amiga Board forum user called Python1 contacted Fritsche to ask if he had ever planned to develop a sequel to Center Court. Gernot answered: a sequel was already in development but never completed. This convinced Gernot to find his old Amiga and search for the game, but he discovered that the hard disk was severely damaged and the code was lost. Python1 didn't lose hope and searched for a solution. Gernot sent the HD to Switzerland, where Python1, working with a friend, was able to recover the data. He sent back the game code to the original author via email. At that point, there was only one thing that Gernot could do: finish the game. In 2016, Center Court 2 Tennis was finally completed and released, completely free. Great job!
Read MoreAuthor: GN Team - Published: 11 April 2019, 1:22 am
Perihelion: The Prophecy is a cyberpunk role-playing / dungeon-crawler developed by Morbid Visions and published by Psygnosis for the Amiga in 1993.
The game was designed by Edvard Toth, who not only created the beautiful Bitmap Brothers-style graphics and artworks but also wrote the game concept and the script. He also defined the game rules, including the spell and PSI-powers system. Two other people did the rest: Zoltan Vech composed the gorgeous music, which adds a lot of atmosphere to the game, while Gyula Szentirmay coded the game.
Read MoreAuthor: GN Team - Published: 7 April 2019, 5:21 pm
Sensible Soccer is the first game of the popular series of football sim created by Sensible Software and published by Renegade.
With this package, we are publishing the first and original release of SensiSoccer, not the v1.1 issued sometime later - also called Sensible Soccer: European Champions - 92/93 Edition.
This revolutionary game, a real milestone in the history of sports videogames, was released in 1992 for Amiga and Atari ST. Until then, Kick Off 2 was THE choice when you wanted to play football with your friends on your computer. But Sensible Soccer changed everything, creating two factions: the ones that still preferred Dino Dini's sim, and the ones that migrated to the new game created by Sensible Software.
Read More