Quicksilva

British software publisher From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Quicksilva was a British games software publisher active during the early 1980s.

Company typePrivate
IndustryVideo games
Founded1980; 46 years ago (1980)
FounderNick Lambert
Quick facts Company type, Industry ...
Quicksilva
Company typePrivate
IndustryVideo games
Founded1980; 46 years ago (1980)
FounderNick Lambert
Defunct1990; 36 years ago (1990)
Headquarters
Products
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They were founded by Nick Lambert in 1980[1], with the name Quicksilva inspired by a particular guitar solo in a track on the album Happy Trails by Quicksilver Messenger Service.[2] Quicksilva mainly released games for the ZX81, Commodore 64 and ZX Spectrum, but also did conversions and some original games for the VIC-20, Dragon 32/64, Oric-1/Atmos, BBC Micro and Acorn Electron home computers.

One of their earliest titles was QS Defenda (originally QS Defender), a clone of the Defender arcade game for the ZX80 and ZX81 home computers.[2] Greater success followed with later releases, including a Star Raiders-style game entitled Time-Gate which reached the top of the ZX Spectrum charts in December 1982.[3] Amongst the company's other successes were Jeff Minter's Gridrunner (1983),[4] Bugaboo (1983, a.k.a. La Pulga) and Fred (1983, titled "Roland on the Ropes" on the Amstrad CPC), the latter two titles licensed from Indescomp S.A., a Spanish software house. They were also responsible for the hugely innovative Ant Attack (1983), written by Sandy White for the ZX Spectrum which featured revolutionary 3-D graphics (which a patent application was made for).[5]

In early 1984, they published their first licensed title, an adaptation of the 1978 book The Snowman by Raymond Briggs,[6][7] although Software Manager Paul Cooper ruled out an adaption of Briggs' When The Wind Blows stating "nuclear war can upset a lot of people".[6]

Later years

In May 1984, the company was bought by Argus Press Software[8][2][9] which later became Grandslam Entertainment. Paul Cooper and Managing Director Rod Cousens left to establish Electric Dreams Software in 1985, when Argus moved the company from Southampton to London.[10][11]

The company continued to publish licensed products, including the first official home computer conversion of Atari's Battlezone, Eric Bristow's Pro Darts,[12] two different games based on Strontium Dog from the 2000 AD comic[12] and Fantastic Voyage (an official licence from the 1966 film).[13]

In late 1984 they developed The Thompson Twins Adventure (an adaptation of the Thompson Twins single Doctor! Doctor!) which was published by Computer and Video Games magazine on a flexi-disc,[14] and published Sandy White's follow-up to Ant Attack, Zombie Zombie.[15]

The following years brought further tie-ins including games featuring Rupert Bear in Rupert and the Toymaker's Party,[16] The Flintstones in Yabba Dabba Doo![16] and Max Headroom.[17] It also produced popular original titles such as Glider Rider and two more arcade ports, Taito's Elevator Action in 1987[18] and the final[citation needed] Quicksilva game, Namco's Pac-Land in 1989.[19]

References

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