Sunday, October 30, 2022

Palace Software

275 Pentonville Road, London, N1

 Palace Software always had good strong cover artwork and I was spoilt for choice when choosing a picture. I could have gone for the 2000AD style cover for Sacred Armour of Antirad, or the comic book Biggles of Stifflip & Co. Alternatively, if I was feeling bold, I could go for the moral panic baiting cover for Barbarian 2 or The Evil Dead, or the actual moral panic causing cover for Barbarian. Ultimately I went for a spooky witch because it's nearly Halloween, and there's time for more more story before twelve. Just to keep us warm. 

Sunday, October 16, 2022

Addictive Games

Albert House, Albert Road, Bournemouth

The two things I associate with Addictive Games are Football Manager and Kevin Toms' face. His decision to do a Victor Remmington and put himself on adverts and packaging was smart. It gave Addictive Games a personality and made the company stand out at a time when most software houses were anonymous and programmers were just names or, at best, occasional photographs in a magazine. It helps of course that the game is Football Manager. One of those rare titles which achieved escape velocity and became a cultural touchstone in its own right. I was amazed when idly searching the online British Newspaper Archive to find a 1994 review of Premier Manager 3, for the Amiga, where Football Manager still had enough resonance for the writer open the review with: "Football Management games have been around since the early days of computing, with Kevin Toms' Football Manager setting the standards on the good old Sinclair Spectrum." (NEWCASTLE JOURNAL, Friday 18 November 1994 page 33).

Sunday, October 2, 2022

Virgin Games

I briefly worked for Virgin Games during its Virgin Interactive Entertainment regeneration. This was the second of my three grazes along the side of the UK games industry (for graze number one, see Graftgold). I never met Richard Branson because the company split from the Virgin mothership in 1993, before I joined, and used the brand name under licence. However, my time there was exactly the glamourous never-ending parade of celebrities you'd expect. Dave Prowse once passed through the office and signed a copy of Tie Fighter. The company receptionist was Simone Hyames, Cally from Grange Hill. I saw Feargal Sharkey a couple of times. And, I was once nearly in the same room as Chaos and X-Com designer Julian Gollop. That's right, look impressed.