Description
The sequel to
Intellivision Lives!, this compilation includes over 30 more emulated Intellivision games, primarily those originally published by Activision and Imagic. It also has the complete library of Intellivoice games (minus Tron Solar Sailer, due to licensing restrictions) and a complete library
of Entertainment Computer System (ECS) games (again, minus a few licensed titles), and some unreleased
games. The complete list of games follows:
- Atlantis
- B-17 Bomber (Intellivoice)
- Beamrider
- Beauty and the Beast
- Bomb Squad (Intellivoice)
- Deep Pockets
- Demon Attack
- Dracula
- Dragonfire
- Fathom
- Game Factory (ECS; previously unreleased)
- Happy Trails
- Ice Trek
- League of Light (previously unreleased)
- Magic Carousel (Intellivoice; previously unreleased)
- Melody Blaster (ECS)
- Microsurgeon
- Mind Strike (ECS)
- Minotaur (debugged version)
- Mr. BASIC Meets Bits N' Bytes (ECS)
- Nova Blast
- Number Jumble (ECS)
- Pitfall
- River Raid
- Robot Rubble (previously unreleased)
- Safecracker
- Space Spartans (Intellivoice)
- Stampede
- Swords & Serpents
- The Dreadnaught Factor
- Thin Ice (release version)
- Tropical Trouble
- Truckin'
- White Water!
- World Series Baseball (ECS; Intellivoice)
- Worm Whomper
Each of these games is played via a very accurate emulator. In fact, there are three emulators included on the disc: DOS, Windows, and Macintosh. But there's more to the package than just emulated games. Each game is complete with a box scan, overlay scan (if applicable), instructions, and credits. There's also a museum of Intellivision oddities, including the complete video of several Intellivision commercials.
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Trivia
This is a multi-mode CD. Not only is
it compatible with both Windows
and Macintosh, you can also put it in
your CD player and listen to three
music tracks. First, there's
"Surfin' on Thin Ice," a remix of
the original Thin Ice music, both by
George "The Fat Man"
Sanger. (The Thin Ice theme
was Sanger's very first music sale
for a video game, but by no means his
last.) Second, there's "Billiard
Blues" by Jimmy Martin. This is
actually a combination of Martin's
original piano performance and the
MIDI file that was converted for use
with Deep Pockets. Lastly, there's
"Compare THIS," an electronica cut by
Confusium and inspired (and including
samples from) the George Plimpton
Intellivision commercials.