Barbarian: The Ultimate Warrior for Apple II

Apple II

Death Sword

Action fighting fantasy
number of games played: 180x last time: Jul 16, 2020, 21:04

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Barbarian: The Ultimate Warrior

Online version of Barbarian: The Ultimate Warrior for Apple II. Barbarian (Death Sword) is a one or two-player fighting game. As the name suggests, the fighters are barbarians. The game offers sword combat in various locales. The game has also a one-player plot mode, where the player has to defeat several fighters to fight evil wizard Drax to rescue princess Mariana. The game was greatly inspired by sword and sorcery fantasy stories like Conan the Barbarian...

Game details

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Released in
1987
Publisher
Epyx, Inc.
Developer
Palace Software, LTD.
Platforms
Acorn, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum (1987), Amiga, PC DOS (1988)
Barbarian: The Ultimate Warrior downloads & info

Other platforms online 4

You can play Barbarian: The Ultimate Warrior online also in a versions for

59%

rating (28 users voted)

Apple II Computers

Online emulated version of Barbarian: The Ultimate Warrior was originally developed for the Apple ][ (Apple //), a family of home computers, one of the first highly successful mass-produced microcomputer products, designed primarily by Steve Wozniak, manufactured by Apple Computer (now Apple Inc.), and launched in 1977 with the original Apple II.
The Apple II became one of several recognizable and successful computers during the 1980s and early 1990s, although this was mainly limited to the US. Through 1988, a number of models were introduced, with the most popular, the Apple IIe, remaining relatively unchanged into the 1990s.

All the machines in the series, except the //c, shared similar overall design elements. The motherboard held eight expansion slots and an array of RAM sockets that could hold up to 48 kilobytes. Over the course of the Apple II series' life, an enormous amount of first- and third-party hardware was made available to extend the capabilities of the machine. The //c was designed as a compact, portable unit, not intended to be disassembled, and could not use most of the expansion hardware sold for the other machines in the series.
All machines in the Apple II series had a built-in keyboard, with the exception of the IIgs which had a separate keyboard. Apple IIs had color and high-resolution graphics modes, sound capabilities and a built-in BASIC programming language.

Apple II emulation powered by Apple2jse JavaScript emulator
online game added: 2010-04-23, by dj