Obviously stuff has continued to happen on the Speccy scene since then, so it’s now, in some senses, not quite so definitive. Or at least it wasn’t, until I updated it, which I’ve just done, so now it is again. Of it. Or something.
(I appear to have a debilitating compulsion to write top 100s for no very good reason. There’s also this one, and I’m currently working on yet another as a distraction from the wretched state of politics, so fans of subjectively-numbered lists of extremely old videogames should definitely stay tuned.)
I also wanted to have it all in one post rather than five, so now if you want to see the videos of the original arcade games you’ll have to click the titles of each entry – only the Speccy videos are embedded within the article, so the page SHOULD now actually load up without falling over.
There are loads of new entries, a few position adjustments – don’t get TOO excited, Bomb Jack fans – and a bit of general tidying, but I haven’t rewritten the entire thing because it’s 33,000 words and I’m not a lunatic, although those two facts are mostly unrelated. So if you haven’t seen it before, go and get a cup of tea and some biscuits, because this might take a while.
The 16K ZX Spectrum was definitely the ginger stepchild of the family of micros that defined home computing in the UK in the 1980s. With far less memory available to coders (just 9K) than a 16K ZX81, the £125 cost of the entry-level model – shockingly the equivalent of £416 now – didn’t get you all that much bang for your buck when it launched, even by the standards of April 1982.
The vast majority of purchasers wisely chose to save up the extra £50 for the 48K version (£175, or a hefty £582 in 2023 money, although still peanuts compared to the Commodore 64’s launch price of £1,327 equivalent), and the 16K Speccy very quickly fell out of favour. In fact it was withdrawn from sale after barely over a year on the shelves, with old stocks cleared at £99.
(There are no official figures for how many of the 5 million Spectrums sold were 16Ks, but Home Computing Weekly reported in May 1983 that 300,000 machines in total were sold in the first year, and in August 1983 Popular Computing Weekly reported that the 48K had outsold the 16K by two to one, so we can make a reasonable guess at somewhere between 120,000 and 150,000 units of the 16K in the year and a bit it was on sale, or roughly 3% of all Spectrums.)
But even in its very brief life (the vast bulk of these titles were released in 1983), the 16K machine amassed a library of fun games that left the catalogues of many better-specced computers in the dust. And for no particular reason other than that 40 years have passed since it abruptly met its fate, we’re here to celebrate them.
So sit yourself down with one of the last cans of Lilt (or don’t, because it’s full of poisonous artificial-sweetener chemicals now), get ready to fondly remember a few old favourites, and hopefully also discover some lost gems for the first time.
My Retropie setup is my favourite physical thing I’ve ever owned. For a total cost of about £300 (the Retropie box itself, plus a monitor and a double arcade joystick), I have instant access to just about the entire history of videogaming up to and including the original Playstation (plus some later stuff too, like the Nintendo DS).
But the physicality of it makes a huge difference. It’s hard to overstate what a complete revelation switching the Pi from a little box under my living-room TV controlled with Playstation joypads to a stand-up machine with proper joysticks was. It changed from something that was nice to have a little play on once in a while to something I use for pleasure every single day.
I was as pleased as a big fat walrus with a free bucket of haddock today to be able to contribute to the week-long one-off revival celebrating the 25th anniversary of the start of the majestic Digitiser.
Especially when I got a lovely new Panel 4 picture from Mr Biffo (instead of money). But I got a bit distracted in the column, and forgot to talk about the thing I meant to talk about, so I'm going to talk about it now.
…is Hell Yeah! – Wrath Of The Dead Rabbit, which is out today on Xbox 360, PS3 and Steam for PC at the bargaintastic price of around £9.99. It's a heady, super-sexy crush of Sonic The Hedgehog, Super Metroid, Bangai-O, Wario Ware, Pokemon and FIFA 13*, made by the people who brought you the splendid Pix'n Love Rush plus me. Essentially, if you don't buy it you're a complete dick and I hope you die.
If there's one thing we all love here at WoSland, it's a good old-fashioned All-Time Top 100. And from a critic's standpoint, we've long thought the gold standard was the 1991 Your Sinclair chart for the ZX Spectrum. Not for its writing, or even (so much) the games themselves, but because the list showcased an incredible breadth of game types, such as we never thought we'd see again in mainstream commercial gaming.
That was until iOS arrived, of course. Now, for the first time in 20 years, it's once again possible to create a legitimate one-format Top 100 in which there are barely any two games in the same genre. And to prove it, that's just what we've done. But there's something even more special about this particular list.
Returning from the shops yesterday, I picked up an unexpected A4 envelope from the hallway by the door. Angry letters from debt collectors aren't usually A4, so I opened it. Inside was a short note from my mum saying "This isn't The Dandy as I know it", attached to something so odd that I instantly knew I had to scan it for posterity and share it with my beloved viewers.
There are lots of great writers. Even within the professional community, let alone the general public, you’ll have a hard time getting two people to agree on who was the best ever. Was it Shakespeare? Orwell? Joyce? Sega Zone-era Jonathan Davies? The arguments echo timelessly through the ages.
I’ve got many heroes and inspirations of my own – Steven Wells, Miranda Sawyer, Barbara Ellen, Craig Kubey, Rosie Boycott, Douglas Adams and more. (Including the fictional composite entity Lloyd Mangram.)
But the greatest writer of all time is someone whose name I don’t even know, and who to earn the accolade only had to write a single word.
Sorry updates have been a bit thin on the ground for the last few days, viewers – I've been insanely busy with about eight different things, and probably will be until Monday. One of them was reaching a milestone with the mighty Free-App Hero, which has now featured a frankly amazing 500 games since being released four months ago and written 150,000 words (roughly two novels' worth) about them. Yikes.
Astoundingly, that translates to somewhere in the region of £5 million saved by the app's users since it came out, and all without having to spend hundreds of tedious hours wading through thousands of godawful ad-strewn games written by escaped mental patients in order to find the good stuff.
Anyway, here are some pictures of weird stuff I saw in the park last week.
Geri on The more you change nothing: “When did China move to the West? D’oh! The point was – The UK is NOT self sufficient or sovereign.…” Apr 13, 04:07
Geri on The more you change nothing: “Wouldn’t that be the viceroy, Alistair Jack, polluting Edinburgh with his minions to occupy the new fangled Garrison – Queen…” Apr 13, 01:11
Geri on The more you change nothing: ““Firstly it is ONLY if you stay in Scotland if you go to england then not a penny. Wales have…” Apr 13, 00:45
Geri on The more you change nothing: “Ummmm..here’s an epic list of SNP achievements. https://grousebeater.wordpress.com/2016/04/19/the-snps-achievements/ Deffo more than five..Granted 99.9% were Alex Salmond. Sturgeons NuSNP tho, aye…” Apr 13, 00:24
Young Lochinvar on The more you change nothing: “It troubles me to even appear to sing their praises anymore but they do ameliorate the Westminster bedroom tax and…” Apr 12, 21:53
Hatey McHateface on The more you change nothing: “Bang! Now yer deid, Bob. Nae me though. I have a fifth achievement to keep me safe You’ve forgotten…” Apr 12, 18:13
Yoon Scum on The more you change nothing: “If we had a Scottish government screaming DRILL DRILL DRILL I might agree with you in many ways However we…” Apr 12, 14:19
Cuilean on The more you change nothing: “Ah, that old Yoon Scum oldie but goodie! For Yoon Scum, North Sea oil and gas has been ‘coming to…” Apr 12, 13:26
Young Lochinvar on The more you change nothing: “Permacrisis reigns. We’ve just emerged from the usual damp/wet dark half of the year and have enjoyed a nice wee…” Apr 12, 13:17
Yoon Scum on The more you change nothing: “And all independence supporting polticans I have seen are calling for MORE immigration More islamic enclaves More restrictions on free…” Apr 12, 12:57
Cuilean on The more you change nothing: “Yoon Scum, a Scot who deprecates (a) other Scots, (b) all things Scottish and (c) Scotland, was succinctly described, by…” Apr 12, 12:57
robertkknight on The more you change nothing: “Oops… I forgot one… Free NHS prescriptions. That’s it. FOUR achievements which if you were to point a gun at…” Apr 12, 12:22
Confused on The more you change nothing: “brian wilson says the migrants will save us https://archive.ph/QL0DP I say they will collapse the welfare state and the NHS…” Apr 12, 12:06
Yoon Scum on The more you change nothing: “You do know that the universals studio theme park isn’t being built by the tories? Grangemouth is closing partly due…” Apr 12, 11:44
Yoon Scum on The more you change nothing: “It’s not the SNP who have lost the plot It’s the idiots who think to question the SNP is to…” Apr 12, 11:34
The Flying Iron of Doom on The more you change nothing: “Hatey McHateface says: 12 April, 2025 at 10:57 am You must save a fortune on heating ? Not to mention…” Apr 12, 11:30
Hatey McHateface on The more you change nothing: “Thanks for posting that. An interesting, if depressing, read. Good news about Luna though.” Apr 12, 11:16
Hatey McHateface on The more you change nothing: “You must save a fortune on heating Incidentally, every time I wonder why the Scottish Government doesn’t purchase Grangemouth…” Apr 12, 10:57
Effijy on The more you change nothing: “SNP Government Civil Service Jobs has increased by 71% in 8 years. That’s 5,385 jobs growing to 9,222. This is…” Apr 12, 10:44
Hatey McHateface on The more you change nothing: “Hey TH, what happened tae yir fuckwit pal (checks capitalisation) Ros? He always used tae write England with an ‘E’…” Apr 12, 10:41
McDuff on The more you change nothing: “Yeah it makes me white hot with rage. Scotland should be as rich as Norway but it’s not and we…” Apr 12, 10:19
Yoon Scum on The more you change nothing: “if you think oil means the population is rich and well cared for means you REALLY haven’t been in west…” Apr 12, 10:12
Yoon Scum on The more you change nothing: “Free public transport for under 22’s has created a culture of news terrorising the paying public so I’d class that…” Apr 12, 10:10
Marie on The more you change nothing: “Information like that really sickens me Scott. Scots really have been scammed – for decades.” Apr 12, 09:57
Dan on The more you change nothing: “Well done and thank you Julia of the ISP for continuing to collate these weekly information bulletins that show there…” Apr 12, 09:44
Dan on The more you change nothing: “Cough. Energy is a reserved matter and to get back to current times; Is the renewables industry being “handled correctly”…” Apr 12, 09:41
robertkknight on The more you change nothing: “I just keep coming back to the Monty Python skit “What have the Romans ever done for us?”, but replacing…” Apr 12, 09:16
Yoon Scum on The more you change nothing: “Yes Norway handled the North Sea wealth correctly HOWEVER The north sea oil started 50 years ago and is coming…” Apr 12, 09:09
Yoon Scum on The more you change nothing: “As we know the UN any day now is going to unchain us from those filthy English bastards NOW Who…” Apr 12, 09:06