CPCRetroDev

From CPCWiki - THE Amstrad CPC encyclopedia!
Revision as of 16:09, 22 December 2020 by MacDeath (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search

CPCRetroDev (or #CPCRetroDev) is an annual Retro Game Creation contest that started around 2013 in Spain.


Origins

Started by a teacher from the Alicante University who happened to be part of the Amstrad Spanish retro-scene. He found that having modern students to try to code ona machine from 1984 (with very limited RAM and CPU ressources) is a challenging and excellent exercise to prepare them for a proper course in computers.


Sponsored/hosted by Alicante University, its first aim was to have student to try their hands on some antique coding machine : the Amstrad CPC and tryign to get a project into realease state, as those students are expected to work in video game industry after graduation.

This contest rewards the best and most creative developers in the retro scene, capable of making the best video games for Amstrad CPC 464. A Ceremony is organized, with livestream broadcast and many guests figures from the current or historical Video game industry and scene personnalities.


While originally opened to student from the university, it went on to be a more open contest, with veteran sceners as well as past students and contestants trying to progress or win some of the prizes.

Each year, a huge batch of productions (of various quality standards) are realeases thanks to CPCRetroDev. The top 10 usually display proper quality on par with historically commercially release games .

On of the main rule is to stricktly adhere to Single load CPC464 specs and limitations, but some contestants would release updated/upgraded version of their game after the contest to allow for RAM extentions or Multiloading or extra content.


With time, more Prizes, rewards and categories are now distributed.

Physical copies of the productions are available each years : a Tape Compilation of the released games can be purchased each year to run on real Tape based Amstrad CPC.


Time Line and Winners

2014

  • 16 games released
  • 1st place Winner : Super Retro Robot Rampage , by Vortex
  • 2nd place Winner : Orc’s Dungeon, by Fracture Games
  • Best game coded in Basic : Auxilio Aereo , by Antonio Corpas


2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

Links