Atlantis Software

Atlantis Software was a London-based[1] UK computer games publisher that published a number of games during the 1980s[2] and early 1990s.[3][4]

Atlantis Software
IndustryVideo games
Founded1984
FounderMichael Cole, Rodger Coghill
Defunct1992
Headquarters,
ProductsComputer games
Websitewww.atlantiscomputing.com/ 

The company was set up by Michael Cole and Rodger Coghill in January 1984 with the first four games released in May of that year.[5] The philosophy of the company was to sell high volume at low 'pocket-money' prices - at first all games were £1.99.[5] The Atlantis Gold label was launched the following year at £2.99 (the 'Gold' tag was soon dropped with games at both prices being released under the Atlantis logo but with the suggested price on the cover).

Their primary focus remained on the low-cost cassette-based games for 8-bit machines for £1.99[2][6] and £2.99[7][8] (commonly known as "budget" games) that formed a significant part of the UK 8-bit software market during the 1980s.

However, they later published games for the 16-bit disk-based Atari ST and Commodore Amiga formats.[4]

Formats covered included the ZX Spectrum[9] on which they published several games reviewed by the UK gaming press.

Selected titles

  • Master Mariner, 1984 (ZX Spectrum)
  • Monster Munch, 1984 (Commodore 64)
  • Cops 'n' Robbers, 1985 (Commodore VIC-20, C64, Commodore 16, Acorn Electron, BBC Micro, Atari 8-bit)
  • Death Race, 1985 (VIC-20, C64, C16, Atari 8-bit)
  • League Challenge, 1986 (Spectrum, C64, C16, Electron, BBC, Atari 8-bit, Amstrad CPC, Amiga, Atari ST)
  • Survivors, 1986 (Spectrum, C64, C16, Electron, BBC, Atari 8-bit, CPC, MSX)
  • Panik!, 1986 (C16, Electron, BBC, Atari 8-bit)
  • Gunfighter, 1988 (Spectrum, C64, Electron, BBC, Atari 8-bit, CPC)
  • Crack-Up!, 1989 (Spectrum, C64, Electron, BBC, Atari 8-bit, CPC)
  • Encounter!, 1989 (Atari 8-bit, Commodore 64)
  • Cavemania, 1990 (Spectrum, C64, CPC, Amiga, ST)
  • Hobgoblin, 1990 (Spectrum, C64, Electron, BBC, CPC)
  • Apache Flight, 1992 (Amiga, ST)


Dates shown are for the first version. In many cases, ports to other machines were released over a number of years (e.g. League Challenge wasn't ported to Amiga until 1991).

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gollark: Also, you need an arc where people campaign to erase C and advocate for Rust constantly.
gollark: There also need to be vague threatening references to antimemes, memetic hazards, apiocryoforms, and other stuff.
gollark: Yes, the orbital lasers can just sit there ominously with "PotatOS Orbital Laser Network" written on them.
gollark: AND orbital lasers. They could look very cool and also blind everyone nearby.

References

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