Platform: ZX Spectrum
Forgotten Worlds
Altered Beast
Jet Set Willy
Commando
Reckless Rufus
Advanced Lawnmower Simulator
EastEnders
Popeye
Don't Buy This
Zombi
Wanted!: Monty Mole
Death Stalker
City Connection
RoboCop
Soft & Cuddly
Eric and the Floaters
Ms. Pac-Man
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
Final Fight
Golden Axe
1942
Brian Bloodaxe
Dalek Attack
ThunderCats: The Lost Eye of Thundera
Beyond the Ice Palace
Bionic Commando
International Karate +
Lode Runner
Sanxion
Ghostbusters
Turrican
Asterix and the Magic Cauldron
Herbert's Dummy Run
The Simpsons: Bart vs. The Space Mutants
Solomon's Key
SimCity
Chase H.Q.
Bomb Jack II
How to Be a Complete Bastard
Rygar
Inspector Gadget and the Circus of Fear
Agent X II: The Mad Prof's Back!
Horace Goes Skiing
Back to the Future Part III
Jetpac
Klax
The Addams Family
Zaxxon
Hungry Horace
Gladiator
▲
2
▼
Warajevo was a ZX Spectrum emulator made in 1993 during the Bosnian War by Samir Ribic and Zeljko Juric. It was created in an attempt to provide nostalgia and escapism from the horrific circumstances they were surrounded by after the duo were disappointed by the Roman ZX emulator. The developers only had 2 to 3 hours a night to work on their emulator due to a low energy supply. Zeljko worked on the emulator at home, while Ribic worked on it at an army camp using a computer connected to a car battery. The latter computer would turn off whenever someone used the coffee machine, which eventually led to its hard disc being destroyed. At one point Ribic risked his life walking through a river bed while dodging bullets to find the last Spectrum pirate in his town, who lived in one of the most dangerous areas. The first version of the emulator would be released in 1994, one year before the war ended. Juric and Ribic would survive the war, and continue working on Warajevo after peace.
Story of Warajevo:
https://worldofspectrum.net/warajevo/Story.html
Roman ZX:
http://spectrum-zx.chat.ru/faq/emu_pc.html#ROMANZX
https://worldofspectrum.net/warajevo/Story.html
Roman ZX:
http://spectrum-zx.chat.ru/faq/emu_pc.html#ROMANZX
▲
2
▼
Clive Sinclair was knighted in 1983 for the creation of the ZX Spectrum and how its significance greatly contributed to the British industry.
▲
1
▼
The ZX Spectrum is more widely remembered today as a video game console rather than its originally intended purpose as an affordable computer for word processing and real-world problem-solving. Hardware creator Sir Clive Sinclair reportedly considered games to be "fundamentally unserious" and was horrified that the computer he invented was becoming primarily seen as a gaming platform.