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Development tools, music trackers, databases, and archives.

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AMOS

Amiga game creation

François Lionet's revolutionary game creation language for the Amiga that made sprite-based game development accessible to anyone who could learn BASIC.

Aseprite

Modern pixel art standard

The industry-standard pixel art editor and animation tool used by indie developers worldwide, combining professional features with a workflow designed specifically for sprite creation.

Beta BASIC

Spectrum BASIC enhanced

Andy Wright's comprehensive BASIC extension for the ZX Spectrum that added procedures, toolkit features, and graphics commands missing from Sinclair BASIC.

Blitz Basic 2

Compiled BASIC power

Mark Sibly's compiled BASIC for the Amiga that produced machine-code-fast games, proving BASIC could compete with assembly - the language that built Worms.

DefleMask

Multi-system chiptune tracker

A cross-platform tracker supporting multiple vintage sound chips, enabling composers to create authentic music for Genesis, NES, Game Boy, C64, and more from a single interface.

Deluxe Paint

The pixel artist's brush

Electronic Arts' Deluxe Paint defined pixel art creation on the Amiga and became the standard tool for game graphics throughout the 16-bit era.

FamiTracker

NES music for the modern age

FamiTracker brought tracker-style composition to NES audio, enabling musicians to create authentic 8-bit soundtracks on modern PCs.

GameBase

Commodore game database

GameBase catalogued Commodore 64 and Amiga game libraries with integrated emulation, providing one-click access to thousands of preserved titles.

GameMaker

Games without code

GameMaker enabled game creation through visual programming, lowering barriers to development and spawning hits like Undertale and Hotline Miami.

GFA BASIC

Structured BASIC

The powerful structured BASIC for the Atari ST that combined BASIC accessibility with modern programming features, becoming the platform's most popular programming language.

HVSC

High Voltage SID Collection

The High Voltage SID Collection preserves over 50,000 Commodore 64 music files, becoming the definitive archive of SID chip music history.

id Tech

Engines that built genres

id Tech engines powered Doom, Quake, and countless licensed games, with source releases educating generations of programmers.

Imagine

Advanced Amiga 3D

The feature-rich 3D modelling and animation package that became one of the most powerful creative tools on the Amiga, used for professional and demo scene work alike.

LightWave 3D

From Toaster to Hollywood

The 3D software bundled with NewTek's Video Toaster that became an industry standard, powering the CGI for Babylon 5, Star Trek, and countless other productions.

Logo

The turtle that taught programming

Seymour Papert's educational programming language that used turtle graphics to make coding accessible to children.

ProTracker

The sound of the Amiga

ProTracker became the standard tool for Amiga music creation, establishing the tracker interface and MOD format that influenced music production software for decades.

RPG Maker

JRPG creation for everyone

The Japanese game creation series that let hobbyists create their own role-playing games, launching countless indie developers.

Scratch

Programming through play

MIT's Scratch teaches programming through visual block-based coding, introducing millions of children to computational thinking.

Sculpt 3D

Early Amiga 3D

One of the first 3D modelling and rendering packages for the Amiga, created by Eric Graham and proving that home computers could produce ray-traced imagery.

SID Wizard

Modern C64 music creation

A cross-platform tracker for creating SID chip music, allowing modern composers to create authentic Commodore 64 soundtracks that run on real hardware.

Simons' BASIC

C64 BASIC extended

The Commodore-published BASIC extension that added 114 commands for graphics, sprites, and sound to the C64, transforming its limited BASIC into a viable game development tool.

Sinclair BASIC

The Spectrum's gateway

Sinclair BASIC came built into the ZX Spectrum ROM, providing the first programming experience for millions and launching countless careers.

Sinclair BASIC

The Spectrum's programming language

Sinclair BASIC gave ZX Spectrum users an accessible programming environment, teaching a generation of British developers despite its quirks and limitations.

SoundTracker

The first tracker

Karsten Obarski's 1987 Amiga program that invented the tracker interface for music creation, spawning ProTracker and influencing all sample-based music software that followed.

Steam

The platform that changed PC gaming

Valve's Steam transformed PC game distribution from retail boxes to digital downloads, becoming the dominant storefront while enabling indie developers and creating new business models.

STOS

Atari ST game creation

François Lionet's game creation language for the Atari ST that preceded AMOS, bringing accessible game development to the ST platform.

The Quill

Adventure game factory

Gilsoft's The Quill enabled non-programmers to create text adventures, democratising game development on the ZX Spectrum and spawning thousands of games.

Unity

Game development democratised

Unity made professional game development accessible to individuals and small teams, powering countless indie hits and mobile games with its approachable workflow.

Unreal Engine

Powering worlds

Epic's Unreal Engine evolved from a shooter's technology into the world's most widely used game engine, powering everything from indie games to films.

World of Spectrum

The Spectrum archive

World of Spectrum became the definitive online archive for ZX Spectrum software, preserving thousands of games, utilities, and documents for future generations.

ZZT

Tim Sweeney's first game

The 1991 ASCII game creation system that launched Epic Games and spawned a creative community of young game makers.