Chuckie Egg: Difference between revisions

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| date=April 1984
| date=April 1984
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| file=1984-09 Acorn User (UK) 26 - p173 (6648d796).jpg
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== Dragon 32 (1983/84) ==
== Dragon 32 (1983/84) ==


The Dragon version was developed in-house by A&F's Mike Webb.
The Dragon version was developed in-house by A&F's M. Webb (Mike or Martin, according to different sources).


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== Tatung Einstein (1984) ==
The Einstein version, like the Dragon's, is credited to M. Webb.
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| file=1984-10 Practical Computing (UK) 7.10 - p25 (6f435dd7).pdf
| title=Practical Computing
| date=October 1984
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== Ads ==
== Ads ==

Revision as of 10:36, 22 June 2026

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.

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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.

Tatung Einstein (1984)

The Einstein version, like the Dragon's, is credited to M. Webb.


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