Computer Shopper - UK (2019-10)

(Antfer) #1

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RETRO


ISSUE 380|COMPUTERSHOPPER|OCTOBER 2019


“Wehaveincluded anew,improved
joystick with microswitches and ametal shaft
inside,and you’ll be able to plug two of them
in if you get hold of another,” Andrews says.
That is welcome news foranyone who
has used the controller forTHEC64 Mini:
toomany photos on social media showed
broken shafts, while the lack of microswitches
meant that the Mini’s joystick was too
imprecise; pulling off diagonal moves proved
particularly troublesome.


NEWFOR OLD


And yet it’s the built-in keyboard that’s truly
turning heads, given the opportunities this
can bring. The Basic programming language is
built intoTHEC64, and there’s every chance it
could revive the healthy coding scene that
existed the first time around.
Indeed, Andrews is hoping it will encourage
users to tinker with the computer and come
up with new programs.
“The Mini seems to have started off
anew cottage industry of new
games and we’d love this to
continue,” Andrews says.
But could this actually be
an ambition toofar?
Neil Grayson, who
edits atributesiteto
the 1990s British
computer magazine
Commodore Format,
believes there is great
potential, first and foremost.


“The Commodore 64 wasn’t and isn’t a
niche product forhardcore nerds, and most
people don’t want to mess about with
Raspberry Pis or finding emulators,”hesays.
“Plenty of casual folk will be rediscovering a
fantastic machine because of its plug-and-play
natureandit’sbrilliantto thinkitmightpickup
new fans.”

Chris Wilkins, who has been instrumental
in helping to reviveZzap!64magazine as an
annual, agrees.
“THEC64 Mini seems to have attracted new
people to the scene as well as those who used
to have aC64 when theywere akid,”hesays.
Whether or not theywill then go on to
seek out and perhaps buy new games for
their fresh purchase,
however,remains to be
seen. Jakob Voos, who
oversees Protovision,
anon-profit software
house that continues
to develop C64 games,
is among those who
are sceptical.
“Most of the buyers will
be mainly interested in old
games that theyknow from
their childhood, and theywill
be unaware of the fact
theycould feed their
computer new software,
which limits the overall
impact,”Voos argues.
Similarly,Simon
Ullyatt, who distributes
new 8-bit games
through his publishing
company Cronosoft, doesn’t
believe it will affect sales in any
way, good or bad.
“People interested in new games
are probably the more hardcore user and
collector types that would have to have the
real machine,” he says.
“Casual users probably won’t be interested
in buying new software.”

⬆Asyou can see,the Commodore 64 logo has been replaced with asimilar-looking THEC64 logo,but it’s otherwise afaithful-looking replica


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PPERPPER||OCTOBER 2019OCTOCTOBEOBER 2019


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➡The bundled joystick has been revised
following complaints about the poor
controller boxed with THEC64 Mini

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