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https://vintagecomputing.ch/?browseid=6792

Herb und Markus haben beide schon zu Schulzeiten ihre Passion für die faszinierende Welt der Flipperautomaten entdeckt; ein nicht unwesentlicher Teil des Sackgeldes ist damals im Münzschlund der ratternden und klatternden Geräte gelandet.
Die legendäre Spielhalle Frosch und viele andere Spielhallen im Niederdorf wurden damals zum beliebten freizeitlichen Aufenthaltsort einer ganzen Generation.Nach der Blütezeit der Flipperautomaten Ende der 70er Jahre ging es langsam mit der Industrie abwärts; die schnellwachsende Konkurrenz durch immer raffiniertere Videoautomaten machte den Flipperproduzenten zu schaffen.

 

Rewardings
2022-07-11 17:16:43
https://vintagecomputing.ch/?browseid=4716
Markus und Marius gehen bei- de noch zur Schule Sie werden sich die 3000 Mark Honorar selbstverständlich teilen. Mit dem Geld wollen beide ihr Com- putersystem ausbauen. Marius Wey schwärmt von einem 24-Na- del-Drucker, während Markus sich von dem Geld eine ROM- Erweiterung für den CPC kaufen möchte Das nächste Projekt der zwei Programmier-Talente steht noch nicht fest, beide wollen aber wieder von sich hören lassen • am besten mit einem erneuten Li- sting des Monats für den Schnei- der CPC. Wir wünschen Ihnen auf jeden Fall ein gutes Gelingen. Ubrigens: MURI ist der Name el- ner Stadt in der Schweiz.
https://vintagecomputing.ch/?browseid=9257
OLIVER Being a pixel guy – the tools were remarkable. We did not have devkit like the Katakis tools or something specified for creating game graphics. I used the editor that came with the Shoot ‘Em Up Construction Kit for sprites, which turned out extremely practical. The Ronny-sprite was created with an C64 editor called Mob-Profi, which provided overlayed hires and multicolour-sprites. The pictures in the intro and end sequence were pixeled in Koala Painter with a joystick, but everything else was more like hacking. I edited the charset with a font editor. The level backgrounds were tile-based maps, so a friend of mine coded one tool for combining 2×2 chars to tiles including the colour – and a second tool for assembling the levelmap like a puzzle game. As setup I had a C128 and Amiga 500 side by side. By the way – there was a TV and a monitor connected to the C128 at the same time, because of the the different video quality and I wanted to be sure that the graphics  looked right on both display types. With our modern mouse or stylus driven tools and those workflow-trimmed programs it is hard to believe that we got things done at all back in the day when we were even lacking fundamentals such as UNDO functionality. However, I have to say that you had full control over the technical specs of the graphics and as a graphic designer you started to think like a coder.
Otherwise, I hardly remember details of the project. At least for the first month, Mario and I were working alongside each other. The intro and the end sequence were finished first. Then it was very intense and determined by crunchtime, the process was sort of first-in-first-out. The progress in code was tied to incoming graphics. Markus composed the new tunes at home far away and we had some issues with the delivery. Nevertheless the whole soundtrack reached us in time and its implementation went smoothly. Still there was no free time at all. In the final weeks weeks it became a kind of competition – like, who needs the least sleep! I also remember that the editing of the levels was pretty chaotic. Three of us worked in shifts and it took much longer than planned.
Oh I almost forgot about the  communication with Virgin. That was the horror for me because I hardly spoke any English back then. David Bishop and I talked English and German mixed, which worked surprisingly well.