J. K. Greye Software

J.K. Greye Software was a British software company set up by J.K. Greye in early 1981 and 6 months later joined by Malcolm Evans after they met at a Bath Classical Guitar & Lute Society meeting in Bath in 1981. They produced computer games for the Sinclair ZX81 and ZX Spectrum home computers.

J.K. Greye Software
Industrysoftware
Foundedearly 1981
FounderJ.K. Greye
Productscomputer games

They struck gold with the revolutionary 3D Monster Maze, the first 3D game for a home computer, which John Greye suggested they produce after seeing a basic 3D Maze that Evans had programmed in Z80 Assembler. In the spring of 1982, Evans split up the company and founded his own company, New Generation Software (a name taken from an advertising slogan by J.K. Greye), which continued to produce games for the ZX Spectrum.[1]

J.K.Greye set up J.K. Greye Enterprises Ltd, a separate company which split off around February–March 1983, to produce games for the Sinclair ZX Spectrum.[2]

List of games

This softography is a merged list between J.K. Greye Software and J.K. Greye Enterprises Ltd. [3]

Sinclair ZX81

  • 10 Games for 1K ZX81 (1981)
  • 1K Breakout (1981)
  • Catacombs (1981)
  • 3D Defender (1981) (later re-released by N.G.S.)
  • 3D Monster Maze (1981) (later re-released by N.G.S.)
  • Pyramid (1981)
  • Starfighter (1981)
  • ZX81 Artist (1981) (these last three released on one "gamestape")

Sinclair ZX Spectrum

  • Ufo (1982)
  • Minefield (1982)
  • Invasion (1982)
  • Kamikaze (1982)
  • The Arcadian (1982)
  • 3D Vortex (1983)
  • 4-Star (1984)

References

  1. Chris Bourne (September 1984). "Hit Squad Not just a load of old rubbish". Sinclair User (30). Archived from the original on March 9, 2001.
  2. Sinclair Programs (1983). "J.K. Greye Software advertisement". Sinclair Programs (March/April 1983): 4.
  3. Martijn van der Heide (2006). "J.K. Greye Enterprises Ltd". Label name information on J.K. Greye Enterprises at the World of Spectrum. Retrieved 2006-02-13.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.