Creation Of Elite Charted 20
Thanks to The UK Guardian for their book excerpt focusing on the creation of classic 3D space shooter Elite. The piece is introduced: "Computer games weren't very good in 1982.. which was what prompted two teenage mathematicians to create the cosmos of their dreams, making them a fortune and inspiring computer nerds the world over", going on to explain why Elite, originally for the BBC Micro but with "the best conversions... for the Nintendo Entertainment System and the Acorn Archimedes" innovated in 3D graphics, complex trading systems, and "having the computer generate the game universe" for the player. However, nothing can explain Elite: The Musical.
oh really? (Score:1)
Best version of Elite (Score:3, Informative)
The article mentions that Acornsoft, the original publishers, didn't want to pay royalty rates as high as Braben and Bell wanted, so they retained publishing rights enabling them to sell those rights at auction to BTSoft, leading to Elite on other platforms.
IMO, by far the best version produced was for the Acorn Archimedes in 1992 - circa 10 years after the original.
Many happy hours as an undergraduate whiled away back then...
Suprisingly good (Score:2)
Current successor to Elite (Score:2)
If Elite was your thing, it's worth a look.
Now: Shareware (Score:3, Interesting)
Why no new Elite? (Score:3, Insightful)
Ditto with Starflight. Both series had the gaming down cold, and I'd like to see what could be done with them using today's technology.
Re:Why no new Elite? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Why no new Elite? (Score:2)
X: Beyond the Frontier [gamespot.com] got good reviews, but it seemed to tank in stores. I bought a copy for $4.99 a few months after it came out that I've been meaning to play for over a year now.
I thought they meant... (Score:1)
Link to PC version (Score:3, Interesting)
Now when is someone going to do like a "Tenebrae" version with OpenGL, etc?
Elite: The New Kind (Score:1)
A guy called Christian Pinder successfully re-engineered a C version of Elite from the original Assembler source. It uses the Allegro library.
I spent many hours reliving my misspent youth a couple of years ago. Unfortunately, David Braben, who had been turning a blind eye to what was a possible infringement of his IP, asked him to pull the source and binaries as someone had ported CP's Elite:TNK to the GBA. The timing couldn't have been much worse as Braben's comp
The book it is from is worth reading (Score:3, Interesting)
The article is from Chapter 3 of Francis Spufford's "Backroom Boys" [amazon.co.uk]. I enjoyed the book immensely.
As the subtitle suggests it is unashamedly British in outlook, but celebrates engineering with six anecdotal stories that would warm the heart of any geek (or at least allow them the odd knowing chuckle).
As well as Elite, it covers Britain's space program (Black Arrow, Blue Streak etc.), Concorde (topical), cellphones, the Human Genome, and a reprise on Britain's space program with Beagle 2. Not a proper review I know, but a recommendation all the same.
Re:The book it is from is worth reading (Score:2)
none (Score:1)
To a good half of their fellow students, of course, they were just indistinguishable nerds.
LOL@them
The things we play (Score:2)