Personal Computer Games (April 1984)

in #retrogaming17 days ago


Cover of the April 1984 issue of Personal Computer Games


Personal Computer Games is a computer gaming magazine that was published in the U.K. in the 1980s. It covered the various personal computers available there including the Commodore 64, BBC/BBC-B, Spectrum, Amstrad, and others. The April 1984 issue includes:

Features

  • Adventure Competition - Submit the correct answers based on the clues and you could win one of 101 prizes for the Commodore 64, BBC, Electron, Dragon, Oric, Lynx, Spectrum, or Nascom.

  • Which Stick - Reviews of various joysticks available at the time including the Starfighter, Tac 2, Competition Pro, QuickShot, Le Stick, Dragon Data, Slik Stik, Joy Sensor, The Boss, Command Control, Arcade Professional, Triga Command, Atari Joystick, TrickStick, and more.

  • Scramble Unscrambled - A detailed look at Scramble clones and other Scramble-like games including Rocket Raid (BBC), Airstrike 2 (Atari 400/800), Scram-20 (VIC-20), Whirlybird Run (Dragon 32), Penetrator (Spectrum), Skramble (VIC-20), Skramble (Commodore 64), Scramble (ZX81), Skramble (Dragon 32), Super Skramble! (Commodore 64), Scramble (Spectrum), and Rocket Raider (Spectrum).

  • Driving Force - An interview with Andy Walker, managing director and chief programmer of Tasket Ltd.

  • 100 New Games - Ratings of 100 different games on a variety of systems including the Commodore 64, VIC-20, Spectrum, BBC, Dragon, Oric, Atari, Lynx, Electron, and others.


Table of contents from the April 1984 issue of Personal Computer Games


Regulars

  • Buzz - 48K Lynx to be phased of of the U.K. market (96K and 128K versions remain available); new Marvel Comics adventure games from Adventure International (these are the adventure games Scott Adams wrote); Atarisoft releases ports of Atari games for the Commodore 64 and VIC-20 (Defender, Donkey Kong, and more); Paintbox released for the Commodore 64; Spectrum emulator for the Spectrum QL; and more.

  • Byte-Back - Letters from readers about Lunar Jetman, games for the VIC-20, Ultima Zone, adventure game coverage, Manic Miner, the Aquarius computer, and more.

  • Screen Test - Tons of game reviews including Galaxy, Stellar Dodger, Genesis, Gridtrap 64, Jumpin' Jack, Cybermen, Bonka, Xerons, Manic Miner, Vultures, Wildfire, Quasar, Haunted House, Siren City, Hunter, China Miner, Cosmic Convoy, Neptune's Daughter, Dancing Feats, Supa Catcha Troopa, Mega Hawk, Aztec Challenge, and Forbidden Forest for the Commodore 64; Cosmonaut!, Star Defence, Hell Gate, Outback, and Chariot Race for the VIC-20; Banana Man, Cybertron Mission, Zarm, The Pen and the Dark, Challenger, Adventureland, Birdie Barrage, Lemming Syndrome, Zombies Revenge, Light Cycle, Martian Attack, and Horserace for the BBC/BBC B; Dallas, Abyss, and Airline for the Electron; Poo-Yan, Loki, Starship, Vanquisher, Paragram, Two-Gun Turtle, and Galaxy 5 for the Oric; Pi-Eyed, Mutant Ant Attack, Gobstopper, Cybo Run, Alchemist, Killer Knight, Hawks, 2003, Kosmik Pirate, Monkey Bizness, 3D Seidab Attack, Bear Bovver, Rommel's Revenge, Brag, Doomsday Castle, Mrs Mopp, Oligopoly, Here Comes The Sun, Bowls, Denis Through The Drinking Glass, Pi-Balled, Cavern Fighter, Dinky Digger, and Loony Zoo for the Spectrum; Captain Sticky's Gold, Batty Builder, Hyperblast!, and Bombastic for the Atari 400/800; Protector, Alert And The Monsters, Cyclops, Avenger, Galactic Raiders, Pinball, Lazer Zone, Hooked, Air Traffic Control, Space Fighter, and Kriegspiel for the Dragon 32; Colossal Adventure, Backgammon, Gobble-De-Spook, and Pit of Ignorance for the Lynx, and probably a few others I missed.


Back cover of the April 1984 issue of Personal Computer Games

Read more: https://www.megalextoria.com/wordpress/index.php/2024/10/31/personal-computer-games-april-1984/



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Oh WOW so Cool I remember growing up with my first Micro-Computer yes a Commodore 64 and used a 1200 Baud(Bps) modem to tie up the parents phone line by Dialing up local BBS's(Bulletin Board Systems). Good ol' Day's!💯👍🙂😁

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My first computer was also a Commodore 64. I think I got it Christmas 1986. I got a disk drive a year later. I didn't really start calling BBSes until 1993 when I got my first IBM PC compatible. I was aware they existed before then, I just didn't know how to find any local numbers, lol.

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Yeah man I hear ya, I didn't get the Disk Drive right away either, I got a Tape Drive first lol, they were so so slow, and a cpl years later I bought my first Print 🤔 hmmm I believe it was an MPS-803 model printer dot matrix Mate wow 😲. It's amazing what a person can remember when you think back sometimes correct me if I am wrong but I believe the floppy disk drive(5 1/4) was model 1541 I will have to Google that to see if I remember right 👍. Some Good Times though, the Good ol' days, and now I am thinking back again....and realizing I didn't have the modem for awhile and can relate about not being able to find or know about BBS Numbers right away. Have a great Day!

The first year I had my Commodore 64, I didn't even have a tape drive. However, I did have a neighbor I borrowed one from a couple of times. I remember spending hours typing in a magazine program only having to sacrifice it when I turned the power off, lol. When I did get a disk drive, it was the 1541-II. This was the smaller model with the external power supply and the color matched the lighter color of the Commodore 64C that I had.

I don't remember what model my first printer was. I believe it was some generic but Epson compatible model. Generally worked ok though.

Yeah ya 👍. I remember the 1542 v2 it was white and about half the length of the original right? Good time's!

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I can remember the days when I built my own text adventure games complete with a language parser. It was how I developed my coding skills.

I first learned to program in BASIC on my Commodore 64. I didn't get as advanced a building a text adventure game at that time though. I made some things like disk utilities and a note taking application. I started a lot more things than I finished though.

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I still to this very day, start a lot and don’t finish stuff!! I started in the same place with my C64, BASIC and then assembly language which was hard but I was determined to do it. Led onto College with COBOL, C and on from there really.

I never really got into assembly much. None at all on the C64 really, a little 68K assembly in college along with C and C++.

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