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iD is a video game developed by Mel Croucher and Colin Jones for the ZX Spectrum and published by CRL in 1986. The game is text-based and takes the form of a conversation with an entity that has inhabited the computer. The player's task is to gain the entity's trust and find out what other inanimate objects this entity has inhabited in the past.
TK90X boot screen. The case was a little taller than the original Spectrum and the keyboard placement was equal to the original keyboard, except for some additional Sinclair BASIC commands that did not exist in the Spectrums (UDG for user defined characters in the place of the £ sign - including specific Portuguese and Spanish characters such as ç and ñ, as well as accented vowels - and the ...
A circuit ID is a company-specific identifier assigned to a data or voice network connection between two locations. This connection, often called a circuit, may then be leased to a customer referring to that ID. In this way, the circuit ID is similar to a serial number on any product sold from a retailer to a customer.
Puzzle video game: ZX Spectrum: 1991 Scorpion A sequel to Atomix. Cervii: Arcade game: MS-DOS: 1992 Vlaada Chvatil: Crux 92: Action Puzzle video game: ZX Spectrum: 1992 Stantz Software Perestrojka: Arcade game: ZX Spectrum: 1992 GCC Remake of a Soviet game Perestroika. Microx: Puzzle: Atari 8-bit: 1993 HMC (Filip Oščádal, Petr Klvač) Remake ...
List of free analog and digital electronic circuit simulators, available for Windows, macOS, Linux, and comparing against UC Berkeley SPICE. The following table is split into two groups based on whether it has a graphical visual interface or not.
Lenslok was released in 1985 as a plastic lens in a foldaway frame. [3] The Lenslok device was essentially a row of prisms arranged vertically in a plastic holder. Before the game started, a two-letter code was displayed on the screen, but it was corrupted by being split into vertical bands which were then rearranged on screen.
The only titles it published were a trilogy of games by Raven Software, which use modified versions of game engines developed by id and featured id employees as producers. A fourth game, Strife , was briefly under development by Cygnus Studios and was to be published by id; after a few months it was cancelled. [ 104 ]
Sinclair User said it was up to the usual Psion standards, and that the quality and the detail included in the game made it one of the best games for the Spectrum. [14] In their 1990 retrospective of driving games, Your Sinclair also lamented the lack of other racers, but they praised the realism of the simulation, considering the age of the ...