Amiga Games List 9,3/10 5602reviews

I know this is not a nice thing to do; but when it comes to Amiga games, most of the diskettes out there in the big, ol' world seems to be. Gamma-test editions as a friend of mine calls it. I do have a thing against having pir 'ed software on the official own list, but I would also like to have a list over games that I have for my Amiga. SO it is quite simple: If it is on my Owned list, then it is an original game; if it is on this GeekList, it is 'ed (might also add my originals - these will be labelled as originals. The idea of this list is for me to do inventory, as well as being able to share my list before going to meetings where I will be bringing games so we can pick a few on before hand. It also serves for me as a way to search the database for missing games to add, which I then can add using the information provided by the game, and/or by the Internet. If you have some Amiga titles laying around - or just some FD diskettes (I am not interested in 2HD diskettes), - or even older Commodore floppys and tapes, let me know.

I would like both original and unoriginals - with or without boxes, manuals, etc. I know that most of the games on this list is illegal - but how many of you have not been using illegal games at some point.?

Maybe not your style, but for me the Amiga was (point-n-click adventuring aside) all about military simulators, which seem to have sort of died out of late. From tanks to submarines, there was a sim for it and it was probably produced by Microprose: Gunship 2000 and B-17 Flying Fortress were probably the pick of the bunch (particularly in the latter’s case with the crew management element), although Silent Service 2 (WW2 Pacific war submarines) and F-19 Stealth Fighter were atmospheric and exciting. Then there’s “Dogfight” which allowed you to match fighter aircraft from different eras against each other in various dueling scenarios (e.g. A WW1 Sopwith Camel versus a Korean war-era MiG-15 jet). Spectrum Holobyte had the almost unassailable “Falcon” series, Digital Integration pushed technical boundaries with F-16 Combat Pilot and Tornado (which regrettably, to all intents and purposes would not run on a bog-standard A1200) – even Lucasfilm/LucasArts got in on the trend with their more arcade-orientated efforts “Battlehawks 1942” and “Their Finest Hour” Like. Actually, just reading through the list of Microprose games ( ) and there are some absolute crackers on there: Midwinter/Midwinter 2: Flames of Freedom; the Civilisation series, Railroad Tycoon But we have to talk about Pirates! How amazing was that game?

This is a list of games for the Commodore Amiga computer system, organised alphabetically by name. See Lists of video games for related lists. As Barreiras Do Amor 2010 Camaro. This list has been. Amiga games database containing data, screenshots, reviews, cheat codes, walkthroughs, maps, manuals, links, box scans, disk scans.

I must have spent hundreds of hours trawling the Spanish Main, looking for french Buccaneers to ram and plunder (the sword fights!), trading tobacco and grain, then trying to get married off to the Marquis’ daughter this all before pirates became the internet’s supreme beings (next to cats). Did anyone ever get to retire to the governor’s mansion – I always seemed to end up as a tavern keeper for some reason. My favorites from my childhood that aren’t on here I loved how sports games/sims were in a specific way so much deeper than they have been in the past 20 or so years. “Now,” it’s all about how close to the real thing the game is, and largely about having all the real players, who look ever more so like the real players, the real teams, the real stadiums, the real ads in the real stadiums “Then,” there were games like Earl Weaver Baseball and Gretzky Hockey, which allowed you to create all your own teams, with all your own players and attributes. The baseball game allowed you to make all your own stadiums, too, with insane wall proportions.

The result was 12-year-old me made a stadium for the “Wyoming Tetons” that looked like America’s pastime’s homage to a D-Cup. These games live on as the sports games I got most emotionally invested in because I created everything from the ground up. I LOVED the game Walker. The one where you were a two-legged machine of death, mowing down enemies with a machine gun that never ran out of bullets but instead overheated (work around: get a joystick with a rapid fire button. Something about the intermittent nature of it meant the gun never overheated.) I could never beat the game, and I was delighted to discover that all my failed video game goals as a child are able to be fulfilled by playthoughs on youtube. This allows me to avoid the time and hassle of getting emulators and moving on with my life. Totally agree with Speedball 2, but somehow I still have a soft spot for Speedball 1.

It was one of the first games I got with my Amiga. I remember cranking the music to it to way out of control levels. I remember the poster of all the opponents that the game came with (and how I used all the names for one of the teams in Earl Weaver baseball). The game was simpler, but it was very cool.

Amiga Games List

I remember I had a friend who was so much better than I was at it. Thanks again to Youtube for letting me put my curiosities at rest about the ending. Everyone seemed to love Sensible Soccer. But my friends and I thought the soccer game by Dino Dini (can’t remember the name) was more fun. There was something relatively too linear and less fluid about Sensible. Dini’s game had a more dynamic ball and player movement was more exciting and explosive. We’d play tournaments for hours.

There was this racing game on the Amiga that I was quite captivated with, and I would like help remembering what it was. It took place in a post-apocalyptic world. It was top-down. The computer AI was crap in that pretty soon the computer would fall more and more behind, and you’d finish the race (it was like a story race, with stages and a final goal) so, so far ahead. I remember “the end is nigh” was written on the tracks.

What was that called? The game titled Epic still peaks my imagination in a major way. It was like Battlestar Galactica. Help get your population fleeing a dying planet to safety, past attacking forces. The graphics and music were like nothing I had seen before, and embodied the name of the game to a T.

Unfortunately, I also remember the game being quite broken. Nowadays I would be pretty annoyed, but as a kid the hope that playing a working version of a game whose presentation and romance captivated me outweighed the actual frustration of a game that basically didn’t work. Thanks for this article.

Top 100 Amiga Games This list may not always show 100 games, depending on your choice of model and number of needed votes. The higher number of votes you choose, the more trusty this list gets.

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