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Amstrad CPC games

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Pipe Mania
1989 video game
The Bard's Tale
1985 role-playing video game
Defender of the Crown
1986 video game
Shadow Dancer
1989 video game
Double Dragon 3: The Rosetta Stone
1990 video game
Space Harrier
1985 video game
Wonder Boy in Monster Land
1987 video game
The Legend of Kage
1985 video game
Renegade
1986 video game
Rainbow Islands: The Story of Bubble Bobble 2
1987 video game
Bonanza Bros.
1990 video game
Rygar
is a 1986 platform game developed and published by Tecmo for arcades. The player assumes the role of a "Legendary Warrior" who must navigate numerous levels and defeat enemies with a weapon called the "Diskarmor", a razor-sharp shield with a long chain attached to it that operates like a yo-yo. The warrior intends to defeat Ligar, an evil "dominator". Later ports, particularly the NES and Lynx versions, expanded on the near non-existent story from the original.
Wonder Boy
1986 video game
Strider
1989 arcade video game
Super Monaco GP
1990 video game
Titus the Fox
1991 computer/video game
Hyper Sports
1984 video game
Nebulus
1987 video game
Bionic Commando
1987 arcade video game
Rick Dangerous
1989 video game
Double Dragon II: The Revenge
1988 arcade game
Rampage
1986 video game
Ninja Gaiden
1988 arcade game by Tecmo
Solomon's Key
1986 puzzle game
California Games
1987 sports video game
Turbo Outrun
1989 video game
North & South
1989 video game
Alien Syndrome
1987 video game
Spy vs. Spy
1984 video game
Sabre Wulf
1984 video game
Jet Set Willy
1984 video game
Klax
1989 video game
The Hobbit
1982 interactive fiction video game based on novel by J. R. R. Tolkien
Q90994
1988 video game
Laser Squad
1988 video game
The Duel: Test Drive II
1989 video game
Ballblazer
Ballblazer is a futuristic sports game created by Lucasfilm Games and published in 1985 by Epyx. Along with Rescue on Fractalus!, it was one of the initial pair of releases from Lucasfilm Games, Ballblazer was developed and first published for the Atari 8-bit computers. The principal creator and programmer was David Levine. The game was called Ballblaster during development; some pirated versions bear this name.
Grand Prix Circuit
1988 video game
Alien Storm
1991 video game
The NewZealand Story
1988 video game
Q6023299
1985 action arcade game developed and published by Atari Games
Zombi
1986 video game
Pang
1989 video game
Prehistorik 2
1993 video game
Winter Games
1985 winter sports video game
Star Control
1990 video game
Spy Hunter
1983 arcade video game
Tapper
1983 video game
Shadow of the Beast
1989 computer game
Q493675
1986 military helicopter video game
Rambo
1985 video game for Amstrad CPC, C64, Spectrum
Batman
1986 3D isometric action-adventure game by Ocean Software
720°
720° is a 1986 sports video game developed and published by Atari Games for arcades. Based on the sport of skateboarding, the player controls a skateboarder as they compete in various skating competitions, such as ramp jumping and downhill races, to earn cash.
The Lords of Midnight
1984 video game
Smash TV
1990 video game
Psycho Soldier
1987 video game
Karnov
is a 1987 platform game developed and published by Data East for arcades. A Nintendo Entertainment System port followed, which was released in Japan by Namco the same year and in North America by Data East in 1988. Players take control of the title character Jinborov Karnovski, or "Karnov" for short. Karnov is a strongman popularly illustrated as being from an unspecified part of the Soviet Union's Central Asian republics, as shown on the arcade flyer.
Pac-Mania
is a 1987 maze video game developed and published by Namco for Japanese arcades; it was licensed to Atari Games for release in North America. In the game, the player controls Pac-Man as he must eat all of the dots while avoiding the colored ghosts that chase him in the maze. Eating large flashing "Power Pellets" will allow Pac-Man to eat the ghosts for bonus points, which lasts for a short period of time. A new feature to this game allows Pac-Man to jump over the ghosts to evade capture. It is the ninth title in the Pac-Man video game series and was the last one developed for arcades up until
International Karate +
1987 video game
Mercs
Mercs, released as in Japan, is a 1990 run and gun video game developed and published by Capcom for arcades. It is a sequel to the 1985 arcade video game Commando ( in Japan). While not as successful as its predecessor, Mercs was well received by critics and was a moderate commercial success. It was followed by Wolf of the Battlefield: Commando 3 in 2008, a downloadable game.