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Atari ST games

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Starglider
Starglider is a 3D video game published in 1986 by Rainbird. It was developed by Jez San under his company name Argonaut Software. The game is a fast-moving, first-person combat flight simulator, rendered with colourful wireframe vector graphics inspired by San's love of the 1983 Atari coin-op Star Wars.
Zarch
Zarch (also released as Virus) is a 3D video game developed by David Braben in 1987 for the launch of the Acorn Archimedes computer. Zarch started off as a demo called Lander which was bundled with almost all release of the Acorn Archimedes.
221B Baker Street
1987 video game
Xenon
1988 video game
Kennedy Approach
1985 video game
Dynamite Düx
1989 video game
The Hunt for Red October
1990 video game by Grandslam Entertainments
Corruption
1988 video game
Enduro Racer
1986 video game
Manhunter 2: San Francisco
1989 video game
Blood Money
1989 video game
The Amazing Spider-Man
1990 video game
Nigel Mansell's World Championship Racing
1992 racing video game
Oxyd
Oxyd is a 1990 puzzle video game developed for the Atari ST and ported to the Amiga, Macintosh, MS-DOS, and NeXT by Dongleware Verlags GmbH. It is a game of puzzles and tests to restart all the oxygen generators (called Oxyds) on the player's home planet. The Oxyds must be restarted by opening them in pairs of matching patterns, and (in colour versions) matching colours.
Bubble Ghost
1987 video game
Professional Ski Simulator
1987 video game
Savage
1988 video game
Strider II
1990 video game
Tiger Road
1987 video game
Black Gold
1989 video game of the strategy genre
Trinity
1986 video game
Mixed-Up Mother Goose
1987 video game
Space Rogue
1990 video game
Millennium 2.2
1989 video game
E-Motion
E-Motion (also known as Sphericule or The Game of Harmony) is a 1990 puzzle video game developed by The Assembly Line. It was available for Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, ZX Spectrum, and Game Boy. The Spectrum and Game Boy versions were developed by The Code Monkeys.
Flood
1990 computer game
Curse of the Azure Bonds
1989 role-playing computer game
X-Out
1989 video game
Silent Service II
1990 video game
Super Cars II
1991 video game
M.C. Kids
1992 platform video game
MIDI Maze
1987 first person shooter video game
Deuteros
Deuteros: The Next Millennium is the sequel to the sci-fi strategy video game Millennium 2.2, published by Activision for the Amiga and Atari ST. Ian Bird designed and wrote the game, with graphics by Jai Redman and music by Matt Bates.
Bloodwych
Bloodwych is a dungeon role-playing video game, a dungeon crawler, developed for the Amiga, Atari ST, MS-DOS, Amstrad CPC, Commodore 64, and ZX Spectrum. The box artwork is Chris Achilleos. The player is a champion of Trazere who, after recruiting up to three fellow champions, travels through dungeons and mazes fighting creatures along the way to find and destroy the evil Zendick, and banish the Lord of Entropy.
Escape from the Planet of the Robot Monsters
1989 video game
The Ninja Warriors
1987 video game
Football Manager
1982 association football management video game
Super Cars
1990 video game
BattleTech: The Crescent Hawk's Inception
1988 video game
Planetfall
Planetfall is a science fiction themed interactive fiction video game written by Steve Meretzky, and published in 1983 as the eighth game from Infocom. The original release was for Apple II, Atari 8-bit computers, TRS-80, and IBM PC compatibles (both as a self-booting disk and for MS-DOS). Atari ST and Commodore 64 versions were released in 1985. A version for CP/M was also released. Planetfall was Meretzky's first published game, and it proved one of his most popular works and a best-seller for Infocom. It was one of five top-selling games to be re-released in Solid Gold versions with in-game
Final Assault
1987 video game
Atomic Robo-Kid
1988 video game
Microprose Soccer
1988 video game
Continental Circus
1989 video game
Beyond Zork
1987 video game
WWF European Rampage Tour
1992 video game
Creatures
1990 platform game
Xain'd Sleena
1986 video game
list of Atari ST games
Wikimedia list article
Thunder Blade
1987 video game
Future Wars
1989 video game
Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe
1990 video game
Army Moves
1986 video game
Power Drift
1988 video game
Dark Castle
1986 computer game
Bombuzal
Bombuzal is a puzzle video game designed by Antony Crowther (credited as "Ratt" in the game) and David Bishop for Image Works. The game was released in 1988 for the Amiga, Atari ST and Commodore 64. It was also released in 1989 for MS-DOS and in December 1990 in Japan for the Super Famicom, with the North American version released in August 1992 renamed as Ka-Blooey.
Amberstar
Amberstar is the first installment in Thalion Software's never-finished role-playing video game trilogy. Although considerably more advanced, the game has numerous similarities to Thalion's earlier game Dragonflight, and was thought to be a sequel by many fans. As with most of Thalion's other releases, the public interest was somewhat limited. A sequel, Ambermoon, was released in 1993.
The Humans
1992 video game
Chuckie Egg
1983 video game
Moonmist
Moonmist is an interactive fiction game written by Stu Galley and Jim Lawrence and published by Infocom in 1986. The game was released simultaneously for the Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Apple II, Atari 8-bit computers, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, TRS-80, TI-99/4A, and Mac. It is Infocom's twenty-second game. Moonmist was re-released in Infocom's 1995 compilation The Mystery Collection, as well as the 1996 compilation Classic Text Adventure Masterpieces.