Chuckie Egg
Chuckie Egg is a 1983 platform game originally written by Nigel Alderton for the ZX Spectrum, and officially ported to many other home computers. It was a bestseller, is frequently included in lists of the best games on several platforms, and is widely considered a classic.
Since the original release, authors have released hacks (some even sold commercially), unofficial ports, and remakes.
A sequel, Chuckie Egg 2, was made without the involvement of the original creator.
Interviews
- An interview with Nigel Alderton — 80sNostalgia.com, 2002 (Wayback Machine)
- Chuckie Egg — World of Spectrum forums, 2002 — Alderton's posts are under username 'spot5050'
- Creating Chuckie Egg for the ZX Spectrum — excerpt from the documentary The Rubber-Keyed Wonder, 2022
- ‘People still remember it 40 years later’: the making of Chuckie Egg — The Guardian, April 2026
- Nigel Alderton interview – the man behind ZX Spectrum classic Chuckie Egg — Metro (UK), April 2026
- High Score! Expanded: The Illustrated History of Electronic Games (3rd Edition) by Rusel DeMaria, 2018
– includes a short blurb about Chuckie Egg and interview with Alderton - Acorn: A World in Pixels (Memory Full Edition) by idesine, 2021
– includes six pages on Chuckie Egg including quotes from Nigel Alderton and Doug Anderson
ZX Spectrum (1983)
The Spectrum original was written by 16-year-old Nigel Alderton, a Saturday employee of the Micro-Link computer shop in Gorton, Manchester, which was also the headquarters of A&F Software. Alderton started working on the game at home, but after showing an early version to his coworkers, A&F paid him for the right to first refusal of the finished game.
BBC Micro (1983/84)
While Alderton developed the game, A&F's Doug Anderson worked in parallel on the BBC Micro port.
Dragon 32 (1983/84)
The Dragon version was developed in-house by A&F's M. Webb (Mike or Martin, according to different sources).
Acorn Electron (1983/84)
The Electron version was adapted from the BBC Micro version by Doug Anderson.
Commodore 64 (1984)
This version was credited to S. Townsend (Sean Townsend) and M. Webb.
MSX (1984)
The MSX version was credited only to A&F's "R&D team".
Tatung Einstein (1984)
The Einstein version, like the Dragon's, is credited to M. Webb.
Amstrad CPC (1985)
No developer is credited on the title screen of this version.
Atari 400/800 (1985)
Credited to S. Townsend.
Amiga/Atari ST/PC (1988–89)
These releases were published by a company called Pick & Choose.
Ads
- Released for ZX Spectrum
- Released for BBC Microcomputer System
- Released for Dragon 32/64
- Released for Acorn Electron
- Released for Commodore C64/128/MAX
- Released for MSX
- Released for Tatung Einstein
- Released for Amstrad CPC
- Released for Atari 8-bit
- Released for Amiga
- Released for Atari ST/STE
- Released for DOS
- Released for J2ME
- Released for Android


















