Cronosoft

Cronosoft is a UK-based non-profit software publishing house established in 2002,[1] by Simon Ullyatt[2] which manufactures and markets games and utility software for a range of mainly 8-bit computers that are considered "retro" or commercially obsolete.

Logo

Cronosoft's plan was to produce games on real media (usually cassette tape) and market them via their website, and through user enthusiasts groups.


History

Cronosoft was formed in late 2002 as a result of little software being released for older 8-bit computers. The last major commercial releases and magazine support for systems such as the Sinclair ZX Spectrum and Commodore 64 ceasing around 1993.

Its first release, Egghead in Space (the third Egghead game in the series, the first in the series being published by Crash magazine in the UK)[3], was written and developed by Jonathan Cauldwell, and released on cassette format for the Sinclair ZX Spectrum in 2003[4]

Since the beginning, Cronosoft has increased its range of software to include titles, not only for the ZX Spectrum, but also for the Commodore 64, Vic 20, Amstrad CPC, Sinclair ZX81, Sinclair ZX80, Dragon 32 and even the Mattel Aquarius. Popular titles include Platform Game Designer, Astro Nell, Quantum Gardening, Glove, LumASCII and Code Zero. More recent releases have included Quadron[5] by Cosmium, and Sokobaarn,[6] popular but very different games for the ZX Spectrum.

Cronosoft's plan is to expand its range to cover even more obscure home computers like the TRS80/Tandy CoCo, Oric, Sord M5, and Texas TI99. Of the 100+ titles released as of 2020, more than half are for the Sinclair ZX Spectrum, Sinclair ZX81, and Sinclair ZX80 platforms. The next most popular format is the Commodore VIC-20.

Cronosoft has been featured in several mainstream computer magazines, including Retro Gamer, GamesTM and Micro Mart, and regularly exhibits at computer shows across the United Kingdom, and has in the past included CGE UK, ORSAM and RETRO BALL. Cronosoft has been referenced by the BBC[7], The Guardian newspaper[8], The Independent Newspaper[9], and has been featured in the movie Memoirs of a Spectrum Addict.


gollark: Plus all kinds of weird error sources.
gollark: You get time *differences* in real life since the clocks aren't synced.
gollark: It's harder than that.
gollark: CC does this using the distance thing on modems.
gollark: Anyway, CC (and *kind of* real world) GPS works by computing distances to various things in known places and then determining position based on that.

References


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