Video Game Publisher
Red ShiftIndustry | Video games |
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Founded | 1983 |
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Defunct | 1985 |
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Fate | Main investor stopped supporting |
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Successor | Games Workshop |
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Headquarters | Stoke Newington, London[1] |
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Products | Strategy video games |
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Red Shift was a video game publisher active between 1983 and 1985. They were well known for their strategy games[2] and had a close working relationship with Julian Gollop and Games Workshop.[3]
History
Red Shift's two initial releases were designed, but not coded, by Gollop just after he left school (Time Lords and Islandia). Subsequently, Gollop learnt to program himself, designing and coding Nebula and Rebelstar Raiders for Red Shift.[4]
Apocalypse and its two expansion packs were produced under license from Games Workshop, being based on their board game Apocalypse.
In 1984, a group of Harlow-based Red Shift programmers split off to form SLUG.[2] They continued to program under license from Games Workshop (producing Spectrum versions of their board games Battlecars and Talisman).
By 1985 Red Shift had a range of different strategy titles that appealed to fans of that genre turning to more intelligent and demanding games.[5]
Red Shift closed after their main investor stopped supporting the team. Some staff moved on to Games Workshop.
List of games
Red Shift produced ten games between 1983 and 1985 for the ZX Spectrum[6] and BBC Micro.[7]
- Apocalypse (1983), ZX Spectrum and BBC Micro – based on the Games Workshop board game.
- Time Lords (1983), BBC Micro – based on a paper and dice game.
- English Civil War (1984), BBC Micro.
- Islandia (1984), BBC Micro - a Risk-style game.
- Murkwood (1984), ZX Spectrum
- Nebula (1984), ZX Spectrum
- Rebelstar Raiders (1984), ZX Spectrum
- First Empire (1984), ZX Spectrum – a table-top computer-moderated war game.[8]
- City of Death (1985), ZX Spectrum – a graphic adventure game by Peter and George Carmpouloni.[9]
- The Tripods (1985), ZX Spectrum, BBC Micro and Amstrad CPC – a graphic adventure designed by Watermill Productions and licensed by BBC Enterprises, based on the BBC TV series of the same name.[10]
In addition, three expansion packs for Apocalypse were released in 1984.
References