arkad.nu
LITTLE COMPUTER PEOPLE C64 KASSETT

LITTLE COMPUTER PEOPLE C64 KASSETT

199 kr
C64-LITTLECOMPUTERPEOPLE-CIB

Liknande produkter

FESTERS QUEST NES SCN
SUNSOFT FESTERS QUEST NES SCN
1 999 kr
Nyhet
007 RACING PS1
EA 007 RACING PS1
149 kr
Nyhet
MUPPET RACEMANIA PS1
SONY MUPPET RACEMANIA PS1
499 kr
Nyhet
KUNG FU NES SCN SVARTA SERIEN
NINTENDO KUNG FU NES SCN SVARTA SERIEN
2 999 kr
Nyhet
WASTELAND 3 DAY ONE EDITION PS4
DEEP SILVER WASTELAND 3 DAY ONE EDITION PS4
249 kr
Nyhet
PERSONA 5 ROYAL PS4 PROMO
ATLUS PERSONA 5 ROYAL PS4 PROMO
2 999 kr
Nyhet
Beskrivning

Beskrivning av LITTLE COMPUTER PEOPLE C64 KASSETT

LITTLE COMPUTER PEOPLE C64 KASSETT  CLAM CASE

Little Computer People, also called House-on-a-Disk, is a social simulation game released in 1985 by Activision for the Commodore 64, Sinclair ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST and Apple II. An Amiga version was released in 1987. Two Japanese versions were also released in 1987, a Family Computer Disk System version, published in Japan by DOG (a subsidiary of Square), and a PC-8801 version.

The game has no winning conditions, and one setting: a sideways view of the inside of a three-story house. After a short time, an animated character will move in and occupy the house. He goes about a daily routine, doing everyday things like cooking, watching television or reading the newspaper. Players are able to interact with this person in various ways, including entering simple commands for the character to perform, playing a game of poker with him and offering presents. On occasion, the character initiates contact on his own, inviting the player to a game or writing a letter explaining his feelings and needs. Each copy of the game generates its own unique character, so no two copies play exactly the same.The character's name is randomly selected from a list of 256 names. 

The documentation that accompanied the game fully kept up the pretense of the "little people" being real, and living inside one's computer (the software merely "bringing them out"), with the player as their caretaker.

Two versions of the game existed for the Commodore 64: the disk version, which played as described above, and the cassette version, which omitted several features.On tape versions, the Little Computer Person was generated from scratch every time the game was started up (not only on the first boot, as with other versions), and thus did not go through the "moving in" sequence seen on other versions. Also, on cassette versions the Computer Person had no memory, and did not communicate meaningfully with the user; and the card games, such as poker, could not be played.

 

KOMPLETT I BOX

Fråga oss något om denna produkten...

Namn
Mejladress

Din varukorg


Språk