Platform: Amiga
First Samurai
Tetris
ThunderCats: The Lost Eye of Thundera
Chase H.Q.
Turrican
Lemmings
Quake II
Days of Thunder
Donk!: The Samurai Duck!
James Pond 2: Codename - RoboCod
James Bond 007: The Stealth Affair
Sword of Sodan
Zak McKracken and the Alien Mindbenders
Battle Chess
The Three Stooges
Wing Commander
Another World
Cannon Fodder
Dragon's Lair
Michael Jackson's Moonwalker
Puggsy
Beneath a Steel Sky
Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis
SimCity
Pushover
Sid Meier's Civilization
Total Carnage
Arnold Palmer Tournament Golf
The Simpsons: Bart vs. The Space Mutants
James Bond 007: Licence to Kill
Perihelion: The Prophecy
Enterprise
Mighty Bomb Jack
Castlevania
Rise of the Robots
Space Quest IV: Roger Wilco and the Time Rippers
Final Fight
Caveman Ninja
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade: The Graphic Adventure
Might and Magic III: Isles of Terra
Lemmings 2: The Tribes
Alfred Chicken
Altered Beast
Zombi
P.P. Hammer and His Pneumatic Weapon
Trex Warrior: 22nd Century Gladiator
Disney's Aladdin
Slider
Mortal Kombat II
Hugo: På Nye Eventyr
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19 public schools in the Grand Rapids School Public School District in Michigan, in the U.S., use a Commodore Amiga computer to control their heating and AC for more than 30 years (since 1985 to 2015). The computer features a 1200-bit modem and wireless radio signal to toggle boilers, fans and pumps across the district.
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Hugo was originally the subject of a Danish game show where children would call the TV station airing it and be able to control the character by pressing numbers on the phone, almost like a prototypical form of game streaming. The TV version ran on two Amiga computers, one that would process the game and another that would convert the phone dials into inputs.