![]() ![]() Zorro is considered almost as much of a classic as Bruce Lee is - if not on all available computers, then at least on the majority of them, but the fan basis is definitely smaller than Bruce Lee's. ![]() So, this is sort of like coming a full circle - now I only need to find the TV-series and binge-watch it again. The interest was only magnified by the fact that I found out about this game around the same time a Zorro TV-show was airing on the Finnish television in the early 1990's. However, it was Zorro that first got me properly interested in comparing different versions of games, because the two versions felt so different at the time. Of course, this is no wonder, since some of my earliest gaming experiences were Datasoft games - Bruce Lee on C64 and Spectrum, The Goonies on Atari 8-bit, Pole Position on all three mentioned machines, Zaxxon and O'Riley's Mine on the C64, and Zorro on C64 and Amstrad CPC. Now, let's get back to the basics, and hope there will be no similar updates to this as they were for Bruce Lee.įrom early on in my youth, I had become a fan of Datasoft. There should be enough games on my to-do list at least until the end of this year, and perhaps a little further beyond, and I'm doing Zorro now only because I want the last foreseeable comparison article to be a properly high note. Well, worry not, because there's still a good few comparisons to come, but this does mark the beginning of the end of FRGCB. This is perhaps going to sound a bit worrisome for some of you, but when I started on this blog, I decided that Bruce Lee and Zorro would be the two "bookend" comparison articles. Gold in 1985.Ĭonverted for the Amstrad CPC in 1985 and for the ZX Spectrum 48k in 1986 by James Software Ltd., and published by U.S. Released in North America by Datasoft, and in Europe by U.S. Converted for the Apple ][ by Rick Mirsky and James Garon. Written by James Garon for the Atari 8-bit computers and Commodore 64 in 1985, with graphics by Kelly Day. Designed by James Garon, Kelly Day, John Ludin, Roy Langston and Terry Shakespeare. ![]()
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