Adventureland

From WE Computers Museum
Revision as of 22:43, 21 April 2024 by Jenni (talk | contribs) (add demo and regions)
Adventureland cover.jpg
Adventureland
Developer Adventure International
AI UK (BBC Micro, Dragon 32/64, Electron)
Publisher A B Computers (Commodore PET)
AI (Atari 8-bit, C64, TRS-80, TRS-80 CoCo)
AI UK (BBC Micro, Dragon 32/64, Electron)
Creative Computing (Apple II, Sorcerer, PET, TRS-80)
Level IV Products (TRS-80)
Mad Hatter Software (PET, TRS-80)
Small System Software (TRS-80)
SoftSide Magazine (TRS-80)
Texas Instruments (TI-99/4A)
TRS-80 Software Exchange (TRS-80)
Platforms Acorn Electron, Apple II, Atari 8-bit, BBC Micro, Commodore 64, DOS, Dragon 32/64, Exidy Sorcerer, PET, TI-99/4A, TRS-80, TRS-80 Color Computer, VIC-20, ZX Spectrum
Released TRS-80 Color Computer
US: December 1978 (TRS-80 Software Exchange)
US: 1979 (AI, Level IV, Mad Hatter, Small System)
US: July 1980 (SoftSide Magazine)
UK: 1979 (Creative Computing Software)
Commodore PET
United States: 1979
Exidy Sorcerer
United States: November 1979
Apple II
United States: 1980
Atari 8-bit computers, TI-99/4A, VIC-20
United States: 1981
Commodore 64
United States: 1982
TRS-80 Color Computer
United States: 1983
BBC Micro
United Kingdom: 1983
Acorn Electron, Dragon 32/64
United Kingdom: 1985
Added to
Museum
ScottFree (game and demo): September 8, 2019

Adventureland was a text adventure game by Adventure International.

It was the first adventure game that was sold commercially. The company went bankrupt in 1985 as a result of the video game crash of 1983. The rights to the game eventually reverted to Scott Adams, who re-released it for free as shareware.

A demonstration version of this game was also released as the Mini Adventure Sampler.