Rogue for Amstrad CPC

Amstrad CPC

RPG action roguelike
number of games played: 144x last time: Dec 20, 2024, 15:54

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Click on play Amstrad CPC game now button first to start emulator and load the game. Controls:

~ SPACE = LEFT / RIGHT / UP / DOWN ~ jump/fire
KEYBOARD MOUSE = Keyboard / Mouse

Rogue

Online version of Rogue for Amstrad CPC. Rogue is a dungeon crawling video game first developed by Michael Toy and Glenn Wichman on college Unix systems. In Rogue, the player assumes the typical role of an adventurer of early fantasy role-playing games. The game starts at the uppermost level of an unmapped dungeon with myriad monsters and treasures. The goal is to fight one's way to the bottom, retrieve the Amulet of Yendor, then ascend to the surface...

Game details

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Released in
1980
Publisher
Artificial Intelligence Design, Epyx
Developer
Artificial Intelligence Design
Platforms
Unix (1980), PC DOS, Macintosh (1983), Amiga, Atari ST, TRS-80 (1986), Amstrad CPC, Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum, Atari 8-bit (1988), iPhone (2008)

Other platforms online 2

You can play Rogue online also in a versions for

61%

rating (33 users voted)

Amstrad CPC Computers

Online emulated version of Rogue was originally developed for the Amstrad CPC (Colour Personal Computer), a series of 8-bit home computers produced by Amstrad between 1984 and 1990. It was designed to compete in the mid-1980s home computer market dominated by the Commodore 64 and the Sinclair ZX Spectrum in Europe. The series spawned a total of six distinct models: The CPC464, CPC664, and CPC6128 were highly successful competitors in the European home computer market. The later 464plus and 6128plus, intended to prolong the system's lifecycle with hardware updates, were considerably less successful, as was the attempt to repackage the plus hardware into a game console as the GX4000.

The CPC models' hardware is based on the Zilog Z80A CPU, complemented with either 64 or 128 KB of RAM. Their computer-in-a-keyboard design prominently features an integrated storage device, either a compact cassette deck or 3 inch floppy disk drive. The main units were only sold bundled with either a colour, green-screen or monochrome monitor that doubles as the main unit's power supply. Three built-in display resolutions are available: 160×200 pixels with 16 colours, 320×200 pixels with 4 colours, and 640×200 pixels with 2 colours.
The CPC uses the General Instrument AY-3-8912 sound chip, providing three channels, each configurable to generate square waves, white noise or both. Additionally, a wide range of first and third-party hardware extensions such as external disk drives, printers, and memory extensions, was available.

Amstrad CPC emulation powered by Tiny8bit JavaScript emulator
online game added: 2011-01-11, by dj