Cassette 50

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Cassette 50
Developer(s)Various
Publisher(s)Cascade Games Ltd
Platform(s)Acorn Electron, Amstrad CPC, Apple II, Atari 8-bit, BBC Micro, Commodore 64, Dragon 32, Oric 1, Oric Atmos, VIC-20, ZX81, ZX Spectrum
Release1983
Genre(s)Various
Mode(s)Single-player

Cassette 50 (Galaxy 50 - 50 Excitantes Juegos in Spain) is a video game compilation created by Cascade Games Ltd in 1983. Its 50 games were almost always written in BASIC.

It was advertised a lot in home computer magazines. It came with a free Timex digital calculator watch.

The instructions say "the games will provide many hours of entertainment for all the family at a fraction of the cost of other computer games".[1]

In an interview, Matthew Lewis said he wrote Galaxy Defence in 12 hours at the age of 14. He sent it after seeing a small, anonymous ad in a local newspaper, losing the game's copyright and getting £10. His father, Ernest, drew the graphics.[2]

Games[change | change source]

Only some games are on all platforms (e.g. Star Trek and Maze Eater). Some games are ports or clones of older or popular games (e.g. Lunar Lander). Some games are made by independent developers. Some games with the same name between platforms are a different game. Some games have problems that make them harder to play.

Acorn Electron / Commodore 64 / Dragon 32 / Oric-1 / Oric Atmos / ZX81[change | change source]

Exchange and The Force are not in the Acorn Electron version, but are listed on the inlay. The Dragon 32 version was released again with some updated games. The C64 version of Tunnel Escape is named "Escape or Bust" in-game.

Amstrad CPC[change | change source]

Atari[change | change source]

BBC Micro[change | change source]

The inlay names Dice Thrower "Do Your Sums".

Vic-20[change | change source]

ZX Spectrum[change | change source]

The number with the '#' symbol shows where the game is on the tape.

The booklet names 'Star Trek' 'Startrek' and 'Jet Mobile' 'Jetmobile'.

Reception[change | change source]

The games are very bad.[3][4][5] Cassette 50 inspired the yearly Crap Games Competitions (e.g. the comp.sys.sinclair Crap Games Competition[6] and the C64 Crap Game Compo[7]) and a now-defunct website that reviewed bad games.[8]

References[change | change source]

Other websites[change | change source]