The 20 Greatest BBC Micro Games of All-Time

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  • čas přidán 1. 03. 2024
  • In this video I countdown the 20 greatest BBC Micro games of all-time as voted for by you, the retro gaming community!
    Video Links:
    10 Amazing BBC Micro Exclusives: • 10 Amazing BBC Micro E...
    Acorn Electron Review: • Acorn Electron - Revie...
    10 Amazing BBC Micro Facts: • 10 Amazing BBC Micro F...
    Acorn: A World In Pixels: • Acorn: A World In Pixe...
    Support me on Patreon: / lairdslair
    Greatest of All-Time Playlist: / watch
    v=MQbA7YddJCw&list=PL9UMBCpaQNrG-OXM_HVLnhwBs_H3HX8ii
    #retrogaming #bbcmicro #acornelectron
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Komentáře • 281

  • @TheLairdsLair
    @TheLairdsLair  Před 3 měsíci +1

    Given how popular this video has been I thought I'd add the full Top 50 for you in a pinned post:
    50 - Bonecruncher
    49 - E-Type
    48 - Arkanoid
    47 - Sabre Wulf
    46 - Dunjunz
    45 - Commando
    44 - Sphinx Adventure
    43 - The Hobbit
    42 - Boffin
    41 - Jetpac
    40 - Codename Droid
    39 - The Last Ninja
    38 - Wizardore
    37 - Castle of Magic
    36 - Jet Boot Jack
    35 - Football Manager
    34 - Hopper
    33 - Snowball
    32 - Knightlore
    31 - Stunt Car Racer
    30 - Aviator
    29 - Rocket Raid
    28 - Manic Miner
    27 - Firetrack
    26 - Arcadians
    25 - Daredevil Dennis
    24 - XOR
    23 - The Sentinel
    22 - Twin Kingdom Valley
    21 - Jet Set Willy
    20 - Starship Command
    19 - Killer Gorilla
    18 - Ravenskull
    17 - Stryker's Run
    16 - Granny's Garden
    15 - Zalaga
    14 - Thrust
    13 - Imogen
    12 - Mr. Ee!
    11 - Planetoid
    10 - Snapper
    9 - Castle Quest
    8 - Frak!
    7 - Repton 3
    6 - Citadel
    5 - Revs
    4 - Exile
    3 - Repton
    2 - Chuckie Egg
    1 - Elite
    PHEW!

    • @gklinger
      @gklinger Před 2 měsíci

      No Palace of Magic?! :(
      Other than being sad that game isn't on the list, I think this is a great video.

    • @1234537564534231234
      @1234537564534231234 Před 14 dny

      Superior soccer? 😢

  • @timonsolus
    @timonsolus Před 3 měsíci +19

    One of my favourite games on the BBC was a UK government simulator, in which you would pick a party (Conservative, Labour or Liberals), choose policies, and produce a Budget. If you chose wisely, you would win the general election. Got me interested in politics.

    • @Brandlin
      @Brandlin Před 3 měsíci +5

      GB Ltd.

    • @space_is_ace
      @space_is_ace Před 3 měsíci

      I remember this game ,if my memory is correct ,it had to be typed in from a magazine ?

    • @fatblokediets9648
      @fatblokediets9648 Před 3 měsíci +2

      I loved this game! Bribing voters with massive tax cuts to win elections, then crashing the economy!

    • @Darren-gy2pz
      @Darren-gy2pz Před 3 měsíci

      Sad

    • @chriswoods562
      @chriswoods562 Před 2 měsíci

      My dad and I would play this and see who did best

  • @papalaz4444244
    @papalaz4444244 Před 3 měsíci +9

    "Defender" was superb on BBC Micro. Really authentic.

  • @mattmecham
    @mattmecham Před 3 měsíci +3

    This was my childhood. It got me hooked on programming which became my career. I recently bought a BBC Micro for the nostalgia.

  • @doughnutdoney997
    @doughnutdoney997 Před 4 měsíci +17

    I had an Acorn Electron at home and used a BBC Micro B at school so plenty of memories here. My all time favourite game was Chuckie Egg but did play Elite, Repton 1-3 and especially Ravernskull plenty of fond memories.

    • @shanetheundertaker8474
      @shanetheundertaker8474 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Chuckie egg was so much fun in the early 80's.

    • @timbrownhill7272
      @timbrownhill7272 Před 3 měsíci

      I liked repton, there was a game called 'citadel' that I liked too.

    • @timbrownhill7272
      @timbrownhill7272 Před 3 měsíci

      Oh, and 'Strikers Run'

    • @DingusBatus
      @DingusBatus Před 3 měsíci

      I still have my Acorn Electron, it doesn’t work properly nor does a lot of the games/software load/run😭😭. But I still have it.

    • @uncomfortabletruth8976
      @uncomfortabletruth8976 Před 3 měsíci

      Chuckie egg and Elite 😊

  • @sahhull
    @sahhull Před 3 měsíci +6

    I still have my original BBC B and assorted kit still works.
    Burned a huge amount of hours on Starship command and the side scroller Scramble.
    I still get my Atari 2600 console out of the box every year for the tank battle game.
    Horrendously fun when adult beverages have been consumed

  • @jaysmith2858
    @jaysmith2858 Před 4 měsíci +14

    Even if you weren't a big fan of Elite, you have to admit that its impact on gaming and how ahead of its time it was is undeniable.
    Elite is only one of three 8bit games to get a retrospective 10/10 from Edge magazine. The other two games were Exile (another original BBC Micro title) and Super Mario Bros.

    • @crashoverride328
      @crashoverride328 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Elite marked a paradigm shift in gaming, 8 galaxies, no defined path, save games - all new concepts. On the BBC it even shipped with a Novella providing the back story - The Dark Wheel.
      It even continues today in MMORPG form with Elite Dangerous.

    • @Calilasseia
      @Calilasseia Před 3 měsíci

      Elite was more than a mere game. It packed an entire open world universe into just 22K. Apart from being a tour de force of programming genius, it demonstrated for the first time what computers were really capable of, if programmers put their minds to the task properly. Think about that - 22K of code and data running on a 6502 became the first true "universe game".

  • @paulmitchell2801
    @paulmitchell2801 Před 3 měsíci +5

    I was lucky enough to get a BBC model B in 1983 and still have it to this day along with the 5.25" floppy drive and tape drive. I keep meaning to try and get it running again :)

  • @philipjacques2272
    @philipjacques2272 Před 3 měsíci +8

    One of my favourites was Codename: Droid - Strykers run part 2. Great game

    • @andyhall7032
      @andyhall7032 Před 3 měsíci +2

      ^^ this. brilliant game. I had it for my electron. loved it.

  • @Cragsidebaz
    @Cragsidebaz Před 3 měsíci +2

    Gosh, this takes me back a bit. I was writing software and teaching computing during those golden years and the Acorn computers were just amazing. The coding would have been pretty simple for all these games bar one - Zalaga. I never saw this and can’t believe they managed it on a Beeb! Hats off to whoever did the coding! 🎉

  • @nathanbutcher7720
    @nathanbutcher7720 Před 4 měsíci +9

    Can't believe Geoff Crammond's "Sentinel" didn't get a mention. It's #2 to Elite in my personal list, but I guess a lot of people didn't "get it" at the time.

    • @TheLairdsLair
      @TheLairdsLair  Před 4 měsíci

      It got some votes, but not enough to break the top 20

    • @endoflevelboss
      @endoflevelboss Před 3 měsíci

      Yes and no. Yes Sentinel should definitely be on the list right up there no Elite shouldn't be number 1 it was overrated.

    • @oldboy5001
      @oldboy5001 Před 3 měsíci

      Sentinel was great. One of the first procedurally generated games I think?

  • @Mucus1972
    @Mucus1972 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Elite, Revs and Chuckie Egg were my favourites. Me and my brother also enjoyed Sabre Wolf, for its ace maze and Knightlore, which was 3D isometric fantastic.I preferred Arcadians as a shooting aliens game. I’m 52 now, and race iRacing in VR, my journey started with Revs, through the F1GP Crammond games.

  • @MattTerrell
    @MattTerrell Před 3 měsíci +2

    Brilliant. I played loads of those games. Brought back so many memories.

  • @Umski
    @Umski Před 3 měsíci +4

    I remember playing “Granny’s Garden” at primary school 😂 Then used a BBC to cut parts on a CNC at secondary 😮school

  • @stevewithington1787
    @stevewithington1787 Před 2 měsíci +1

    My dad owned a BBC model B (issue 4) and I had an Acorn Electron which meant I was the de facto computer guy at primary school. Then my dad got an Archimedes 310 which gave me a leg up at secondary school. They were amazing systems for the time, and the quality of the games were excellent.
    I’m surprised Bumble Bee, Frenzy, Psycastria, Swoop and Tempest didn’t make the list. The top three was no surprise though. I also loved Thrust. Regarding the educational games the one that sticks in my mind most was Suburban Fox. There was also one I can’t remember the name of where you were building a settlement that included a moat, and you had a set time to get everything done. You had to allocate workers to the building, defenders against attacks from other groups, and foragers to go and get enough food for everyone. Good times.

  • @shanetheundertaker8474
    @shanetheundertaker8474 Před 4 měsíci +17

    10 print " my teacher is a prat ! "
    20 goto 10
    😂
    Aghhhh. . .
    The good old days of innocence

    • @Echo30Mike
      @Echo30Mike Před 3 měsíci

      LMFAO. I think we all did that in our first lesson in computers back in 1982.

    • @Cragsidebaz
      @Cragsidebaz Před 3 měsíci

      As a former teacher, you might have set this for your students: 10 PRINT “FOCUS” 20 GOTO 10 (Your homework is to try to work out what FOCUS stands for)

  • @skirmisherssouthport5056
    @skirmisherssouthport5056 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Honarable mentions Manic Miner, Adventure, Jet Pack, Twin Kingdom Valley, Commando, Harvey Headbanger, Sabre Wolfe.

  • @GreatAwakeningE
    @GreatAwakeningE Před 3 měsíci +1

    Born in '67 its great to see the games I used to play as a child, thankyou. Remember some of them well. Did my A'Level Computer Science at School with one of these; wrote a BASIC version of Space Invaders for my O'level project. LOL

  • @Echo30Mike
    @Echo30Mike Před 3 měsíci +4

    Elite is/was one of the best games of it's era. Way ahead of the curve. When I was a kid, I always dreamed that one day, someone would make a game to expand it and use modern computing power to really push at what could become possible. I had to wait until 2003 for that to happen. that is when I discovered Eve Online. I've not played it in a while because it is super easy to completely lose you RL to the game. It is one of those games that just sucks you in and consumes you.

    • @morsmagne
      @morsmagne Před 3 měsíci

      I agree with a lot of what you’ve written. I played Eve Online for years but I stopped playing because the core combat gameplay isn’t exciting enough and the game is 'emotionally monotone', e.g. - there's no humour. Personally, I think the future generally is generative AI - in games and in everything else. The future belongs to people who can utilise it the most effectively.

  • @thepenultimateninja5797
    @thepenultimateninja5797 Před 3 měsíci +4

    We had a BBC Model B when I was a kid.
    We were by no means well off, but my dad was an engineer, and he recognized the importance of the new microcomputers.
    I was only little at the time, but I remember him agonizing over the decision to buy one. It was almost like an illness, I guess he must have been losing sleep over the decision. Eventually, my Mom talked him into just going for it, and he brought it home one evening after work.
    Many years later, my parents were watching Cash in the Attic, which was a TV show in which people would gather together all the junk in their house, and sell it to finance a vacation or something.
    In one episode, the family had a BBC Micro, and the 'expert' on the show told them it wasn't worth anything, and to not even bother trying to sell it.
    My parents happened to be having a clear-out at around the same time, and hearing this advice, they threw the mint condition Beeb and the 5.25" floppy drive in a skip.
    I was absolutely gutted, and I am still sore about it to this day lol.

  • @blatherskite3009
    @blatherskite3009 Před 4 měsíci +6

    The BBC Micro was incredibly well-served with unofficial arcade clones - easily the best versions on any 8-bit micro of early arcade classics like Pac-Man, Defender, Space Panic, Frogger, Asteroids, Lunar Rescue, Zaxxon, etc. And it's all the more impressive when you bear in mind that the machine only had about 16K of RAM available once you were in any graphics mode other than Teletext.

    • @TheLairdsLair
      @TheLairdsLair  Před 4 měsíci +1

      I'd slightly push against that, as I'd say that in most cases the Atari 8-bit had the best version. Of the British Micros certainly, the BBC has so many superb arcade clones.

    • @endoflevelboss
      @endoflevelboss Před 3 měsíci +1

      Mr Ee! smashed it for an arcade copy

  • @Cazak69
    @Cazak69 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I remember castle quest with fond memories. Micropower had one of there main offices in Leeds with a big showroom, and of course they had castle quest running on every machine. When you completed the game it showed your finish time on the end screen. Me and 2 friends could complete the game in less than 10 minutes which they said was impossible so we went around and did it on all there display computers :)

  • @pj_naylor
    @pj_naylor Před 3 měsíci +2

    Those sound effects brought back some happy memories of times I should'vebeen studying. 😊
    One of my fellow students at Jodrell Bank spent most of an afternoon rolling over the score on Chuckie Egg - having discovered that the levels just repeated after a certain point, without getting any harder.
    My favourite was Knight Lore (with a personal high score of 3, after weeks of playing and making a huge paper map of the dungeon) - disappointed not to see it on the list.

  • @ultimatetechsite
    @ultimatetechsite Před 2 měsíci +1

    I remember playing elite and being blown away by how "next level" it was. The 3d graphics and the scope of the game felt like nothing I had ever played before. Probably in terms of sheer fun I would have to put it in my top 10 games of all time. Sure, these days its primitive, but at the time it was unprecedentedly good.

  • @gedgicat2063
    @gedgicat2063 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Glad to see Citadel, snapper & Chuckie Egg here. I always loved Magic mushrooms & tarzan, spyhunter, jetpack can't believe they're not on the list

  • @NickDDDD
    @NickDDDD Před 3 měsíci +3

    Thanks for the trip down memory lane. Am 53 yo & ad a BeeB in 1984. Great to find this channel!

    • @NickDDDD
      @NickDDDD Před 3 měsíci

      I still have it boxed up! Along with disc/disk drive (Mitsubishi?) & Watford Electronics DFS. Still works.
      So no one remembers "Felix in the Factory" best Ladders & Levels Game ever (along with CE. KG & F**K.)? Basil's Disc/Disk coper? Rip-Off 9 anyone?

    • @TheLairdsLair
      @TheLairdsLair  Před 3 měsíci +1

      I know Felix in the Factory! In fact I reviewed it in a book I wrote some years ago.

    • @NickDDDD
      @NickDDDD Před 3 měsíci

      @@TheLairdsLair Book? What book? FITF Rules all!

  • @iandavenport2550
    @iandavenport2550 Před 3 měsíci +3

    I worked at Micro power in Leeds. Selling BBC machines.

  • @CoLD.SToRAGE
    @CoLD.SToRAGE Před 3 měsíci +2

    Castle Quest was one of my faves! 🤩

  • @mikepanchaud1
    @mikepanchaud1 Před 3 měsíci +2

    The trick with Castle Quest was to trap all 4 of the little red men and squash them into one man, then I think it was possible to finish the game. Anyone else remember this?

  • @kerbal666
    @kerbal666 Před 3 měsíci +3

    My school had one that had a three button mouse. Had this isometric 3D game where you flew some green triangle aircraft. The left button fired white dots middle button slow boost and right button for fast boost. You flew over random generated islands had no sound and no clue what to do but was fun learning to fly the ship and shoot a tree accurately :)
    EDIT It was the acorn Archimedes and the game was LANDER

  • @derekmcallister947
    @derekmcallister947 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Genuinely surprised that Codename Droid didn't make it onto the list. Lot of nostalgia looking back through those - though I now have a temptation to see if I can find a Twin Kingdom Valley emulator out there somewhere - I never did beat that game.

    • @TheLairdsLair
      @TheLairdsLair  Před 3 měsíci +1

      It was in 40th place, if you want to play Twin Kingdom Valley online you can do so here:
      bbcmicro.co.uk/game.php?id=89

  • @shanetheundertaker8474
    @shanetheundertaker8474 Před 4 měsíci +4

    I used to play ' Elite ' and ' Chuckie egg ' on the BBC Electron.
    😊👍
    And ' joust '

  • @Rorschach.
    @Rorschach. Před 4 měsíci +4

    Still playing ELITE on my PC (as Oolite) some 40 years later.

  • @Eidolonian
    @Eidolonian Před 3 měsíci +2

    Hunchback was epic!!! ❤ Granny’s Garden!!

  • @JonathanReynolds1
    @JonathanReynolds1 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I remember “Imogen”, “Jetpack”, “Banjax”, “Thrust”, and “Podd”. I also remember “Mr E” being on an arcade machine in the 80s and “Planetoid” was known as “Guardian” on the Commodore 64.

  • @apollo12002
    @apollo12002 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Elite was by far its best game absolutely ground breaking for that time. Still have my bbc micro b in the loft, it has a side way eprom expansion board so it can run games and programs from eproms. It has a teletext adapter, music 500 and a floppy disk drive. I learnt to program on it and wrote two simple games. Good times.

  • @FatNorthernBigot
    @FatNorthernBigot Před 4 měsíci +10

    Old fart nerds such as myself are very impressed by this video. 👍

  • @ceejay744
    @ceejay744 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Frak!....Such a beautiful game. So difficult to play, but so so beautiful.

  • @BenjWarrant
    @BenjWarrant Před 3 měsíci +2

    _Chuckie Egg_ at no. 2 and _Elite_ at no. 1 - that's correct. _Defender_ was good too, and I also enjoyed... was it _Missile base?_ Where missiles were raining from the sky and you had to fire interceptor missiles to keep your bases intact. Something like that.

  • @thedarkknight1971
    @thedarkknight1971 Před měsícem +1

    I wanted either a Spectrum or C64, but my Dad said "Nope, you'll get what the schools are using", then we bought the Viglen PC Kit (made it look somewhat like a PC XT/AT, and installed 2 5.25 floppy drives). I also bought every copy of 'Input' magazine and thus the 4 binders to contain them, and lol, semi successfully programed and got working most of the 'input' programs.
    Games wise? MANY were played...
    - Thrust: HELL YEAH... excellent game.
    - Elite: Yeah I did ok, until a friend of mine managed to get the cheat disk that allowed FULL weapons/armour/credits and such, and then spent hundreds of hours exploring, 'Kickin ass' and such... Good times!
    - Chuckie egg: Hahaha you surely are bringing out the classics here!
    - Mission Impossible: I played this on a mates C64... I THINK there was creepy speech in it too, "You'll stay foreverrrrr" (or something like that)
    - Arkanoid: Oh God yeah, MANY hours on that one too!
    What about Galaga? I chewed through MANY levels on that brilliant game! 😏🤣🤣
    🦇😎🦇 🇬🇧

  • @yeknommonkey
    @yeknommonkey Před 3 měsíci +1

    Fortress was a real game changer with 3D looking play. Played it endlessly and thought it was impossible. Tried again a few years ago in an emulator and completed the whole game (basically two long runs) on my second attempt. Was amazed at how difficult it seemed when the idea of what was on screen was so new. And how easy and slow it all was coming from a PS4 etc like 35 years later..

  • @DingusBatus
    @DingusBatus Před 3 měsíci +1

    A lot of fond memories in there. I loved Chuckie Egg. I’m slightly surprised Danger UXB wasn’t mentioned.

  • @edbrown2998
    @edbrown2998 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Chuckie Egg is the game I have fondest memories of, but I’m surprised that Codename Droid (the follow up to Stryker’s Run) doesn’t get more love here, that was an amazing game for the time. And The Last Ninja too, all of the kids were playing that back in the day. Shout out to the amazing Play It Again Sam series where you got 4 games for the price of 1, that was my childhood!

    • @TheLairdsLair
      @TheLairdsLair  Před 3 měsíci

      Codename Droid was 40th and Last Ninja was 39th.

    • @bobcaruthers4427
      @bobcaruthers4427 Před 3 měsíci

      I remember The Last Ninja! I got stuck in the sewer with a giant crocodile. Never did figure it out :)

  • @paulleach3612
    @paulleach3612 Před 3 měsíci +2

    As much as I loved my ZX Spectrum (and still do) I was always slightly envious of friends who had a BBC Micro and a copy of Elite. It was just so damn good on that machine.

  • @bobcaruthers4427
    @bobcaruthers4427 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I too had an Acorn Electron, got it Christmas 1985. I remember my mum looking at it in the shop window saying she was checking the price for my Uncle Kevin. £99.99.
    Repton2 will forever be my favourite game.

  • @MrFuzzyGreen
    @MrFuzzyGreen Před 3 měsíci +2

    What no Yellow River Kingdom?! Sure it came free with the Welcome cassette but I sure as hell played it a lot.
    I think my dad played Repton more than I did!

  • @JimbobSonOfRiber
    @JimbobSonOfRiber Před 4 měsíci +1

    Yay! The thing i said was on the video! Thanks for making me a part of this. And Starship Command is still ace.
    Although a confession: i didn't have a Beeb as a kid, but the much cheaper Electron (although the best game lists will basically be the same)
    Granny's Garden is nonsense though, and i never understood what made it educational.

  • @recklessroges
    @recklessroges Před 3 měsíci +1

    I loved Ravenskull. Many years later I went back with BeebEm and scum-saved my way through all of it.

  • @almor2445
    @almor2445 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Revs was impossible to play! Still seeing it lights up some memberberries!

    • @sahhull
      @sahhull Před 3 měsíci

      It was brilliant if you had the real BBC analoge joysticks

    • @space_is_ace
      @space_is_ace Před 3 měsíci

      I remember giving up on revs fairly quickly ,it wasn't easy to master

    • @TertiaryBrewing
      @TertiaryBrewing Před 3 měsíci

      It was really hard to master but really satisfying when you did. It was one of the few games that claimed some level of realism.

  • @nickharvey7233
    @nickharvey7233 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Didn't really play much Elite on my friend's BBC (though Frontier, the sequel, was a firm favourite when i was lucky enough to get an Amiga). I enjoyed Chuckie Egg, but the games I spent the most time on were Tanks and Canyon Battle (a vertical scroller arcade). I still occaisonaly play Tanks with my kids on a BBC Emulator - that game never grows old!

  • @caeserromero3013
    @caeserromero3013 Před 4 měsíci +2

    We had a C64 at home since 1983. I started school that year but didn't encounter a computer at school until middle school, and even then it was a vic 20 that sat in a corridor unused. There was a BBC in the library at secondary school and we used one ONCE in maths class playing a snooker game about angles, but mostly we played blockbusters on the library BBC if it was raining and couldn't play footy. By then we had business studies GCSE with RM Nimbus 286s running win 3.1 which we mostly used for copyingsuper pixelated soft porn bitmaps of Pamela Anderson and other lingerie models. ..

  • @jasoncampbell6222
    @jasoncampbell6222 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I remember this being called BBC Model B when I was at school, I personally owned the original Spectrum 48K and Aquarius, loved them and spent countless hours typing in programmes from magazines then spending even more hours copying hex code.

    • @TheLairdsLair
      @TheLairdsLair  Před 3 měsíci +1

      The BBC B was just a model in the BBC Micro range along with the Model A, Master, Compact, Econet etc.

  • @johnbradshaw7525
    @johnbradshaw7525 Před 3 měsíci

    I used to use the BBC computer when I was at school. A friend had a BBC computer and we used to play Elite on his machine. I'm still playing Elite now.

  • @camelcase811
    @camelcase811 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I'm surprised not to see Scramble on there!!

  • @Stu2be2
    @Stu2be2 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Loved using it back in the day

  • @flurm7573
    @flurm7573 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I have huge nostalgia for the Beeb, my dad worked for the council going round schools fixing these and "aquired" one somehow (a B, then a Master).
    We had loads of bootleg compilation disks with around 20 games on each, I still have them (along with our original Master & CUB monitor) although the disk drives no longer work (I bought a USB drive a few years ago though).
    My fave games were Elite (of course), Killer Gorilla, Monsters, Arcadians, Jet Pak, Snapper, Canyon Battle, Hunchback, Daredevil Dennis, Labyrinth, Maze (Acornsoft), Eagle's Wing, Rocket Raid, Pole Position, Road Runner and loads more.
    Also, some educational games which were fun and also played them at school: Granny's Garden, The Lost Frog, Merlin's Castle, L, Table Worms.
    Will need to get them all set up again, this video and typing this comment has got me right in the mood, lol. Cheers! :)

  • @MarkHewitt1978
    @MarkHewitt1978 Před 3 měsíci +1

    The only one I am sad didn't make the list is Magic Mushrooms. An ok game by itself but the level editor made it one to keep coming back to. Also a mention for a much later release Repton Infinity; which included a rudimentary scripting language you could do some interesting stuff with.

  • @michaelhill6453
    @michaelhill6453 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Exile. My favourite 8-bit game.

    • @bobmcbob4399
      @bobmcbob4399 Před 3 měsíci

      Same, I played the shit out of that. No guides, so never completed it. The fun was (as in metroidvanias) getting new items and figuring out how best to use them and exploring + working out the numerous environmental puzzles. I even managed to glitch into a sharp hollow corner and "sequence break" through the ground into a new area where a new electric arc weapon was waiting for me.

  • @ahudspith
    @ahudspith Před 3 měsíci +3

    I was a bit addicted as a kid. Had a C64, BBC B and a Speccy in my 8 bit collection.
    BY FAR the best version of Elite was on the BBC.
    But you missed one exceptional game. "The Sentinal". Never played it on the Speccy - but did on the BBC and C64. And OMG how that could be missed amazes me.

    • @TheLairdsLair
      @TheLairdsLair  Před 3 měsíci

      The Sentinel only just missed out on the top 20 but made the top 40.

  • @prscrystalized3706
    @prscrystalized3706 Před 3 měsíci +1

    We had the Master 128. I loved Cyborg Warriors. Graphically great feeling of thundering across an alien landscape. Anything Acornsoft or Micro Power was guaranteed to be good. Glad to see Imogen there as well.

  • @davidknoll
    @davidknoll Před 4 měsíci +1

    Nice to see Granny's Garden, I played it at school on the Nimbus in the early 90s. I can play through it in a few minutes now I've memorised most of the answers. The Witch hits different on a 34" widescreen. Several years ago I collected together (copies of) all the ports I could find- Amiga, BBC, C64, CPC, Nimbus and Spectrum. I've paid for the more modern iOS one though.

  • @LewesMint
    @LewesMint Před 4 měsíci +2

    Planetoid was originally called Defender before someone thought they'd better change it to avoid litigation. There was a bug in the original version whereby if you collected all the little men without depositing them, and then killed all the aliens the new level would have 256 men and no aliens. It was fun do do this and then just kill all the men.

  • @peteslinn482
    @peteslinn482 Před 3 měsíci +1

    "May I use your sideways RAM?" 😀

  • @Magnumaniac
    @Magnumaniac Před 3 měsíci +2

    There really was no competition for the number one slot - Elite was orders of magnitude ahead of the closest competition. I got through so many Quickshot leaf spring joysticks on my journey to Elite rank. They just weren't built well enough to survive the rigors of a Thargoid attack in witch-space :)

  • @stuartsinclair6269
    @stuartsinclair6269 Před 3 měsíci

    I think you have got it so right, the order of the games, I was a Speccy owner but referred to the bbc use to play all Speccy games and bbc games via an emulator app which are both free today, brought a cheap android tablet and the games are all on there absolutely hundreds of them👍🏻

  • @paulfloyd6790
    @paulfloyd6790 Před 3 měsíci +1

    My very first exposure to computers, it was 1985 and I was in year 6 at primary school. My teacher didn't have a clue how to use it. If I remember correctly I think it used 8 inch floppy disks.

  • @actuallyusingmyrealnameher5061
    @actuallyusingmyrealnameher5061 Před 4 měsíci +1

    We usually had some time during IT before the teacher got in to furtively copy games amongst ourselves and play them for a couple of minutes. I remember playing a time pilot knockoff and resetting it just before getting caught 🙂

  • @seany84uk
    @seany84uk Před 4 měsíci +1

    I remember playing pip's island adventure on the bbc in primary school. I also briefly owned one in the late 90s and had the teletext adapter

  • @jimcook1161
    @jimcook1161 Před 3 měsíci +1

    One thing you got wrong Acornsoft's PacMan clone was always called Snapper. Atari made them change the graphics into cartoon figures

  • @Mellow_Wood_Hill
    @Mellow_Wood_Hill Před 3 měsíci +1

    Granny’s Garden was the BOMB.

  • @kevinhanley6462
    @kevinhanley6462 Před 4 měsíci

    I loved going on the BBC at primary school, then got to use BBC Basic again at secondary school on the RM Nimbus; I was unaware it was an emulator and had programs to select.

  • @RltchieI
    @RltchieI Před 3 měsíci +1

    Funny to think as a child schools would have one BBC Micro in the whole school bar my last school which had a couple. Near the end of my final year they got about three PCs if I recall & they had a demo of Magic Carpet. I was lucky in the mid 80s as a child as my father bought a BBC Master and although we only had the cassette player, it was my first computer. My first game was Revs & the only game my mum was ever able to beat me at was Aqua Attack on the Cassette that came with the computer, we also had Killer Gorilla, Airwolf & few others that slip my mind. If I recall Aqua was at 107 on the tape counter. My father even had a cartridge that plugged into it, but I never knew exactly what it was or what it did. I do know it had spaces for four chips and his had three plugged in it & there was two switches on the top. In the next decade or so I progressed to a C64, Amiga 1200 & then into the world of PCs. Used to love playing Chuckie Egg at school on the old Micros, I have a port of it on PC and still play it. Also played Citadel, a game with a hunchback & Granny’s Garden.

  • @JohnnyWednesday
    @JohnnyWednesday Před 4 měsíci +2

    It's not so much that Thrust is a good game - it was the draw of the 'realistic' physics at a high framerate. People don't talk about flight sims going from low FPS to high FPS - but it was very much a 'thing' in terms of attractiveness. An overclocked old sim still holds up - it was the physics + a certain threshold of framerate that really hooked people - and Thrust tapped into that.

  • @TertiaryBrewing
    @TertiaryBrewing Před 3 měsíci +1

    Aviator is the one that is missing for me, first attempt at something vaguely like a realistic flight sim. As a kid I had a massive challenge picking which game to buy first, Aviator, which I already knew about, or Elite, which had just been released.

    • @TheLairdsLair
      @TheLairdsLair  Před 3 měsíci

      Aviator missed out on the Top 20 buy just one point!

    • @NickDDDD
      @NickDDDD Před 3 měsíci

      WOW! Aviator! My Beeb came with free Acornsoft games....Planetoid, Aviator & other stuff!

  • @paulthomas-vo5vf
    @paulthomas-vo5vf Před 3 měsíci +1

    I remember making an OS fiddle, so when playing defender you could hold the return key to get continuous shots rather than having to keep hitting the key. Inspired by my friend, who I thought was going to break the keyboard!

  • @michaelturner4457
    @michaelturner4457 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I always liked and often played Rocket Raid by Acornsoft. which was an unofficial clone of Scramble. Another one I often played with friends was Tycoon by Warlock Software, a property trading game rather like Monopoly.

  • @davefb
    @davefb Před 3 měsíci +1

    Ooh nice, Revs, that was fab especially when you got the expansion tracks. snettertons bombhole was pretty amazing to see. There was also a flight sim called Aviator by Geoff Crammond.
    .
    .
    You can also change gear btw....

    • @davefb
      @davefb Před 3 měsíci +1

      Oh and...
      Strykers Run was designed by Chris Roberts and Philip Meller... Yes.. THAT Chris Roberts of wing commander and now Star Citizen fame/infamy...

    • @MarkHewitt1978
      @MarkHewitt1978 Před 3 měsíci

      To see Aviator today, where the challenge was to fly under a wireframe bridge, and then compare to today's Microsoft Flight Simulator, it isn't that long between the two, the progress is mind blowing. I never had Revs but did have Grand Prix Construction Set and put countless hours into it.

  • @falksi3182
    @falksi3182 Před měsícem +1

    Great list

  • @talideon
    @talideon Před 4 měsíci +2

    I think Granny's Garden ending up on the list was a pure nostalgia vote. It's not really much of a game so much as a pretty linear set of screens. That said, the one for if you're caught by the witch is probably the biggest reason it's burned into so many people's memories!

    • @blatherskite3009
      @blatherskite3009 Před 4 měsíci

      I suppose "Granny's Garden" was for UK kids what "Oregon Trail" was to US kids - something everyone played because it was "educational" and which people of a certain age have fond memories of because it was more fun than normal lessons :)

    • @TheLairdsLair
      @TheLairdsLair  Před 4 měsíci

      Correct!

    • @dcarbs2979
      @dcarbs2979 Před 4 měsíci

      Never completed it, to this day I still want to! I always thought the dragon riddle round should be easy.

    • @MarkHewitt1978
      @MarkHewitt1978 Před 3 měsíci

      Most kids at school really loved it. Myself I had a BBC B at home and compared with the gameplay and graphics of the games I had there Grannies Garden looked awful, so I never actually played it!

  • @edjack1993
    @edjack1993 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Nostalgia off the chart!

  • @LuckyBird551
    @LuckyBird551 Před 4 měsíci +2

    If a "BBC Mini" plug and play system would be released today (like the commodore and NES has done recently) do you believe it would be successful, or not sell at all?

    • @TheLairdsLair
      @TheLairdsLair  Před 4 měsíci +3

      I think it would be too niche sadly, especially as it would only appeal to people in the UK.

  • @joeharding5303
    @joeharding5303 Před 16 dny +1

    Fortress and Sentinel should definitely be in there.

  • @Carlb328
    @Carlb328 Před 3 měsíci

    Seeing these I'm glad I had a Commodore.

  • @MartinPiper6502
    @MartinPiper6502 Před 3 měsíci

    A good list :)

  • @Drew-Dastardly
    @Drew-Dastardly Před 3 měsíci +1

    Before I even watch this video, the early Acornsoft arcade clones were excellent. Snapper (Pac Man), Planetoid (Defender), Arcadians (Galaxians) and Meteors (Asteroids). They were the games I played at the arcade (or kebab shops) at that time.
    Starship Command was innovative and what I consider the predecessor to Elite which was the best game of all time.
    eta: I really liked Super Invaders too - a then modern 80's version of 70's Space Invaders.

  • @marcraygun6290
    @marcraygun6290 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Like you played them in school , my tiny welsh school(25 pupils) had one, fond memories of planetoid and zaxxon , i had commodore plus 4 then spectrum plus 2 as my das was truck driver my other equally humble friends had spectrums ( a 48 and a 228 ) but my posher friends with tory dads had beebs

    • @blatherskite3009
      @blatherskite3009 Před 4 měsíci

      Oi! My dad bought us a Beeb and he was Labour through and through :) He just happened to have a well-paid job at IBM... Anyway, surely a Welsh school should've had a Dragon 32? 🤨

    • @pitmatix1457
      @pitmatix1457 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Planetoid is still the best Defender game I have played.... Better than Defender in fact!

  • @WreckheadAdam
    @WreckheadAdam Před 3 měsíci +1

    Never played games on the BBC, only used them at school. Doomsday Project anyone?

  • @h-leath6339
    @h-leath6339 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I'm a Californian. So, Commodores, Apple IIEs and 8086s. After 40 years you could put me in front of Pango, 3Daemon or Montezuma's Revenge and after 5 minutes my muscle memory alone would be playing them through. Why I love vids on early UK computer gaming is we never had Those computers over here. Though I do remember running into a ZX once when I was a kid. And let's not forget Pinball Construction Set, though you never really "won" that game.
    And let's not get started on BASIC. And especially (shiver) assembly code...
    These kids these days and their HTML. Pretty sure none of them even know how many compiler layers their code is going through. Always remember, we speak human language, digital computers speak 0 and 1. We've made a lot of translators to manage the language gap.
    10 rem rant over

  • @PhilipNorton42
    @PhilipNorton42 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Solid list. Couple of games that missed out are Deathstar, Labyrinth and Space pilot.

    • @TheLairdsLair
      @TheLairdsLair  Před 3 měsíci +1

      One of my own votes went to Death Star, but didn't seem to be so fondly remembered by everyone else.

    • @PhilipNorton42
      @PhilipNorton42 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@TheLairdsLair I can understand that Death Star was a little frustrating. Being killed by a sinlge pixel bullet wasnt fair. Still, I would have put it higher than, say, Ravenskull. I played that a few times and could never get very far or figure out what I was meant to be doing. Maybe I just didn't "get" it :)

  • @foulplay99
    @foulplay99 Před 3 měsíci +1

    It’s funny, I had a BBC Micro and completely missed out on Oregon Trail and Elite. I played the hell out of the Repton games though, and Citadel. Starship Command was really cool. I remember some other games but not the titles coz it’s been so long!

  • @jaywyse4720
    @jaywyse4720 Před 4 měsíci

    Awesome. Thanks.

  • @pweddy1
    @pweddy1 Před měsícem +1

    I am shocked they didn’t get sued!
    Some of these look like straight ports not clones!

  • @dale3852
    @dale3852 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Elite was elite. Just amazing

  • @ukar69
    @ukar69 Před 3 měsíci +2

    If you tried to pirate Frak it would just play Captain Pugwash!

    • @NickDDDD
      @NickDDDD Před 3 měsíci

      Some notorious Pirate in the mid/early 80s went by the name of "Pugwash Soft Ultld" I heard.....Rumours of 400-500 games.... Just rumours though.....

  • @craigwalker3194
    @craigwalker3194 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I remember playing Chuckie Egg for the BBC Micro at school, and then I Decided there & Then I wanted one but it was Too Expensive. So I Eventuly settled on A 48k Speccy which turned out a Really Smart Move.

  • @Magipher
    @Magipher Před 3 měsíci +2

    Exile being at #4 and not #2 is a travesty (obviously it was never going to be #1)

  • @rectify2003
    @rectify2003 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I still have Elite here on my Win 10 machine, the old version of Elite, that was on floppy

  • @randomxnp
    @randomxnp Před 3 měsíci +1

    I had so many of these games ...

  • @SteveGodrich
    @SteveGodrich Před 4 měsíci +1

    I remember getting quite far in Castle Quest but access to the school computer was hard to come by so never completed it. Must make a point of doing that soon...

    • @bobmcbob4399
      @bobmcbob4399 Před 3 měsíci

      I went to boarding school in NZ and as I lived onsite, I also managed to get the keys to the computer lab and ended up in 2 rooms, 1 with BBC masters and the other with Archimedes. Living in there is how I survived boarding school lol

  • @97channel
    @97channel Před 4 měsíci +1

    The only game I think I ever played on the BBC Micro was Dragon World. It was by 4Mation, and had very similar gameplay to Granny's Garden. I believe it was actually a direct sequel, as it featured very similar, if not exactly the same, artwork of dragons which appeared in Granny's Garden. Dragon World seems to be the far lesser known of the two. It was a sequence of logic puzzles. We used to play it occasionally in school, usually in small groups of three or four. We could never work out the logic behind the puzzles, our progression through the game was pure trial and error, and simply repeating what worked before. As you'd expect from a BBC Micro educational game, the graphics and sound were very basic. But something about it just captivated me. I guess it was the mystery of where it might lead next, where the story might go. It is one of my fondest computer game memories, also one of my earliest. Like reading a book, the scenes in the story took imagination to bring it to life. But at junior school age, I certainly had enough imagination to get totally absorbed by it. Through that blocky BBC Micro artwork, I saw in HD mental imagery the entire world that the game was set in. And from that sensation, I foresaw where games and the whole computing experience would lead to. I was in no doubt that we would eventually see the amazing lifelike virtual worlds which we now have, when the technology progressed. For me, this simple BBC Micro game was the moment that the door to another world first opened. I saw the full potential of computers. Dragon World and the BBC Micro have the fondest of places in my heart, and it feels kinda weird to be now expressing this on the very tech which I then imagined would one day exist, whilst playing that simple little game.