-
Atarisoft was a
brand name used by Atari, Inc. in 1983 and 1984 to
publish video games for non-Atari home
computers and consoles. Each
platform had a...
-
computers starring a
British explorer named Sir Dudley.
Ports under the
Atarisoft label were
released for
Apple II, ColecoVision,
Commodore 64, VIC-20,...
- Day. Most of the home
ports were from Atari, Inc.,
sometimes under the
Atarisoft label. As a Luna City
police officer ****igned to
Sector Nine, the home...
- by
either Atari, Inc. or its
software label for non-Atari platforms,
Atarisoft. The 1982
Atari 2600
version was one of the best-selling
games for the...
-
Color Computer, TI-99/4A, and IBM PC.
Several of
these were
published by
Atarisoft. It was
later sold on
cartridge by
Atari Corporation following the launch...
- Arcade. The
following games were in the
ColecoVision format: Dig Dug (
Atarisoft) This
number is
always up to date by this script. This
number is always...
- II,
Commodore 64, VIC-20, TI-99/4A, and IBM PC
compatibles under its
Atarisoft label. Most
early conversions did not have a dual
joystick and were received...
-
Amstrad CPC, and ZX Spectrum. The
Commodore 64 has two versions: an
Atarisoft port
which was not
commercially released and a 1986
version by
Ocean Software...
- complaints. Atari, Inc.
published Joust for its own
systems and
under the
Atarisoft label for others:
Atari 2600,
Atari 5200,
Atari 7800,
Atari 8-bit computers...
- Spectrum, IBM PC compatibles,
Apple II and TI-99/4A
released under the
Atarisoft label.
Unlike Pac-Man, most home
versions of Ms. Pac-Man
include all three...