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[1]: 58 The resulting game was another tremendous hit for the company and is now regarded as one of the greatest video game/film tie-ins. [12] The game was used as the basis of the Amiga 500 "Batman Pack", [1]: 58 which became one of the most successful hardware/software bundles of all time.
Owing to the inexpensive cost of the Amiga 500 in then price-sensitive Europe, sales of the Amiga family of computers were strongest there, constituting 85 percent of Commodore's total sales in the fourth quarter of 1990. The Amiga 500 was widely perceived as a gaming machine and the Amiga 2000 a computer for artists and hobbyists. [38]
Batman (also known as Batman: The Movie) [1] is an action video game developed and published by Ocean Software based on the 1989 film of the same name. It was released on 11 September 1989 [ 2 ] for the Commodore 64 and ZX Spectrum with Amiga , Amstrad CPC , Atari ST , MS-DOS and MSX versions following soon after.
used the Amiga 1000 chipset 512 KB Chip RAM, 512 KB Fast RAM on CPU slot card Amiga 500: 1987–1991 68000 512 KB 1.2 – 1.3 3.1 / 3.2 First "low-end" Amiga; later A500s shipped with 1 MB memory Amiga 2000: 1987–1992 68000 1 MB: 1.2 – 2.04 3.9 / 3.2 revised expandable model with Amiga 500 chipset
Medusa (Atari ST emulator), Fusion (Macintosh Emulator), AMax and AMax II, (Macintosh), GO64 (first Commodore C64 emulator), Transformer and PCTask (it was an Intel 8088 emulator, all software based, capable to emulate Intel PC based platforms ranging from PC XT 4,7 and 7 MHz on Amiga 500, up to 80486 running at 12 MHz on Amiga 4000 and other ...
Amiga, Inc. was a company run by Bill McEwen that used to hold some trademarks and other assets associated with the Amiga personal computer. The company has its origins in South Dakota –based Amiga, Inc. , a subsidiary of Gateway 2000 , of which McEwen was its marketing chief.
“The Batman” is nearing a significant box office milestone. The newest superhero adventure, starring Robert Pattinson as the Caped Crusader, has generated $463 million globally, putting the ...
Instead of discontinuing the Amiga 500 and 500+, Commodore envisioned it taking the place of the Commodore 64 in the low-cost segment. To make that possible Commodore set out to design the Amiga 600, a system intended to be much cheaper than the Amiga 500. The Amiga 500 itself would be replaced by Amiga 1200, also under development.