Mikro-Gen

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Mikro-Gen
Industry
Computer software
Founded1981 (1981)
FounderMike Meek, Andrew Lawrie
Defunct1987 (1987)
FateAcquired by Creative Sparks Distribution
Headquarters,

Mikro-Gen was a UK software company based in Bracknell, Berkshire that produced games for home computers in the early to mid-1980s.

The company was formed by Mike Meek and Andrew Laurie in 1981, in order to capitalise on the growing boom of

Crash. Later, the company produced the Mikro-Plus add-on for the ZX Spectrum
.

The company was bought out by Creative Sparks Distribution in 1987, which subsequently went into receivership six months later.[2]

Releases

  • Star Trek - 1982.
  • Knockout - 1983.
  • Mad Martha - 1983.
  • Genesis II - 1984 - written by Dale & Shelley McLoughlin.
  • Witch's Cauldron - 1985[3] - written by Dale & Shelley McLoughlin
  • Laserwarp - 1983; Reviewed in Crash with an overall score of 77%[4]
  • Air Traffic Control - 1984 - by Dale McLoughlin
  • Shadow of the Unicorn - 1985. Reviewed in Crash issue 24 - 7/10 - required Mikro-Plus Expansion Unit to run [5]
  • Battle of the Planets - 1985. Reviewed in Crash issue 26 - 71%
  • Equinox - 1986. Reviewed in Crash issue 30 - 87%
  • Stainless Steel - 1986.

Wally Week series

  • Automania - 1984. Reviewed in Crash with an overall score of 88%[6]
  • Pyjamarama - 1984. Reviewed in Crash issue 10 - 92%
  • Everyone's A Wally
    - 1985. Reviewed in Crash issue 14 - 93%
  • Herbert's Dummy Run - 1985. Reviewed in Crash issue 18 - 90%
  • Three Weeks in Paradise - 1985. Reviewed in Crash issue 26 - 93%

Mikro-Plus

The Mikro-Plus was an add-on for the ZX Spectrum computer. While this computer was limited to 48KB of usable RAM, the Mikro-Plus let it load 64KB programs by storing 16KB as a shadow ROM in the add-on itself, and loading the remaining 48KB from cassette tape as usual. Mikro-Gen invested £130,000 in producing it.[7] Bundled with the game Shadow of the Unicorn,[8] it reached no. 5 in the ZX Spectrum charts and no.9 in the All Formats charts in October 1985.[9] It sold 11,000 copies, almost 30,000 short of the number needed to break even[5] and no further Mikro-Plus games were produced.

References

  1. ^ "The Wally guide to Mikro-Gen". Sinclair User. No. 37. 1985. Archived from the original on 5 February 2012. Retrieved 28 February 2013.
  2. ^ David Lester (10–16 December 1987). "Risen from the ashes". Popular Computing Weekly. Vol. 6, no. 49. Focus Magazines. p. 32. Retrieved 26 February 2020.
  3. ^ "CRASH 17 - Witch's Cauldron".
  4. ^ "CRASH 2 - Index".
  5. ^ a b "From The Archives: Mikro-Gen". Retro Gamer. No. 86. Future Publishing. 23 April 2009. p. 40.
  6. ^ "CRASH 7 - Automania".
  7. ^ "Shadow of the Unicorn". Crash. No. 20. 1985. Retrieved 28 February 2013.
  8. ^ Graeme Kidd (1985). "Breathe new life into the user port". Crash. No. 19. Retrieved 28 February 2013.
  9. ^ "Charts". Popular Computing Weekly. No. 43. Sunshine Publications. 24 October 1985. p. 35. Retrieved 26 September 2022.