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The first game from the company; [24] an investment strategy game; "a quick (averages 1 and 1/2 hr.) and easy game, useful as a light and friendly evening among other "beer and pretzel" games." [25] Vindicator: 1983: Jimmy Huey H.A.L. Labs Voodoo Castle: 1980: Scott Adams & Alexis Adams Adventure International: Voodoo Island: 1985: Angelsoft ...
Conan: Hall of Volta (or simply Conan on the box cover and title screen) is a platform game from American developers Eric Robinson and Eric Parker and published by Datasoft in 1984. [2] It is based on the character Conan created by Robert E. Howard. This game was originally written for the Apple II and ported to the Commodore 64 [3] and Atari 8 ...
The game features a "listening point system" where listening to songs used in the creation of a game character causes the character to grow in strength. [9] There are 50 characters that can be generated, each of which falls into one of five job classes: Soldier, Mage, Archer, Knight, and Monk. Most of the Troopers and their skills are named or ...
It includes features to play live one on one in real time, join teams, listen to the full playlists with Spotify and Apple Music integration, and many advanced customizations. A fourth game and spin-off, SongPop Party, was released on April 2, 2021, as part of the Apple Arcade subscription service.
Claims preliminary work started before canceled. IIGS version mentioned on box and manual of ports. UMS 2 - Nations at War: 1990: Microplay Unverified Reported programmed by developer. Manual from other ports have IIGS loading instructions. Vindicators: 1989: Tengen / Atari Games Yes Finished - fully playable (beta-version, bugs) Wings of Fury
The cartridge version runs on a machine with at least 16K, and uses character mode graphics; while the floppy version needs 32K, runs in a bitmap mode, and duplicates the Apple II graphics. The Commodore 64 release had background music which is absent from other versions.
SunDog was first developed for the Apple II, with version 1.0 being released in March 1984, and version 1.1 (bug fixes) released three weeks later. Version 2.0, which included enhancements and improved performance, was released in October, 1984. An enhanced version was released for the Atari ST in December 1985.
Taxman is a clone of Namco's Pac-Man written by Brian Fitzgerald for the Apple II and published by H.A.L. Labs, a firm he cofounded with Greg Autry, in 1981. [1]Featuring the same maze and yellow Pac-Man character as the arcade game, and promoted as "the definitive version of the popular game," HAL was asked to stop selling Taxman by Atari, Inc. who owned the home rights to Pac-Man.