Novagen Software
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Industry | Video games |
---|---|
Headquarters | , |
Products | Computer games |
Novagen Software Ltd (commonly referred to as Novagen) was a British software developer which released a number of computer games on a variety of platforms from the mid-1980s to the early 1990s.
The company was set up by Paul Woakes and Bruce Jordan[2] and employed approximately 18 people.[3] In addition to running Novagen, Paul Woakes also developed and programmed the vast majority of the company's products [citation needed] and the first version of a custom loading scheme that worked ten times faster than Commodore's own, which became Novaload.[4][5][6]
Games
[edit]- Encounter! (1983) Atari 8-bit, (1984) C64[7]
- Mercenary (1985) Atari 8-bit, C64,[8] C16, Plus/4, ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC, Amiga, Atari ST
- Mercenary: The Second City (1986) expansion pack for Mercenary
- Mercenary Compendium Edition (1987) Mercenary + The Second City
- Backlash (1988) Amiga, Atari ST[9]
- Battle Island (1988) C64[10]
- Hell Bent (1989) Amiga, Atari ST[11]
- Damocles: Mercenary II (1990) Amiga, Atari ST
- Damocles: Mission Disk 1 (1991) Amiga, Atari ST
- Damocles: Mission Disk 2 (1991) Amiga, Atari ST
- Damocles Compendium Edition (1991) Damocles + Mission Disk 1 + Mission Disk 2
- Encounter (1991) Amiga, Atari ST
- Mercenary III (1992)[12] Amiga, Atari ST
References
[edit]- ^ "The Novagen office".
- ^ "The Making of Mercenary".
- ^ "The Novagen team".
- ^ "The Making of Mercenary". www.sockmonsters.com. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
- ^ retroreactiv8 (8 February 2018). "Paul Woakes: a tribute". RetroReactiv8. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Commodore Computing International - Vol 07 No 03 (1988-11)(Croftward)(GB) - page 9 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming". Internet Archive. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
- ^ "Redirecting".
- ^ "Impossible to Display Scan".
- ^ "Backlash review from AUI Vol 2 No 2 (Feb 1988) - Amiga Magazine Rack".
- ^ "Impossible to Display Scan".
- ^ "Hellbent review from The One for 16-bit Games 5 (Feb 1989) - Amiga Magazine Rack".
- ^ "Mercenary III: The Dion Crisis is the Game Most Worth Saving from 1992". Rock Paper Shotgun.
External links
[edit]