Difference between revisions of "Adlan"
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ADLAN is available through [https://web.archive.org/web/20220812023856/https://richard.brooksby.org/1987/adlan/ the author's website], with an image of the ROM that can be used in an emulator or burnt onto a chip for use in a real Amstrad CPC. | ADLAN is available through [https://web.archive.org/web/20220812023856/https://richard.brooksby.org/1987/adlan/ the author's website], with an image of the ROM that can be used in an emulator or burnt onto a chip for use in a real Amstrad CPC. | ||
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+ | == User Manual == | ||
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+ | [https://www.cpcwiki.eu/imgs/7/76/ADLAN_%28User_Manual%29_v2.8.pdf Adlan User Manual v2.8] | ||
== Reviews == | == Reviews == |
Latest revision as of 20:48, 24 June 2025
The ADLAN (ADventure LANguage) adventure game compiler was created by Richard Brooksby and published by Graduate Software in 1988 for the Amstrad CPC.
Unlike most other 8-bit adventure systems at the time, rather than running from disk or loading into memory from cassette tape, the compiler element of the system was supplied on a physical ROM. The user would write their adventure in a text file and that source would then be turned into a machine code program by the ADLAN system.
The system required an Amstrad CPC fitted with a disk drive, but it could produce both disk and cassette-based adventures. When running from disk, games could load in graphics and additional text.
The system came with a demonstration adventure Bar Trek that was written by Richard Brooksby and a school friend.
ADLAN is available through the author's website, with an image of the ROM that can be used in an emulator or burnt onto a chip for use in a real Amstrad CPC.
Contents
User Manual
Reviews
Balrog review / Amstrad Action 60
Downloads
ADLAN (ROM Source included on a due to archive.org making it hard to download from the authors site)
A list of games created using Adlan