I work at the national museum of computing here in England and I must say among all the classic games people might try to imagine this is the one that makes grown men suddenly turn into teenagers again and reminisce. Quite often people sit down at the BBC's and other people come over and they chat and give advice about this thirty year old game as if it was a modern game. It really is so impressive to me to see what effect it has on people.
I'm too young to know started on elite dangerous but it is amazing to me that the original came out in 1984 ten years before my birth I've been playing elite dangerous since 2016 when I discovered it
I first came across this in June 1988 when I was 12 during a school activities week. It blew my mind. We got an Amiga A500+ in Christmas 1991. I saw Elite and got it in April 1992 and have been playing it since. I got an Amiga A600 in April 1994. I was impressed they used the Fibonacci series to generate the planets, very clever. Good use of maths. I help run a Code Club and thrilled my kids like programming. Use my Raspberry Pi to run my business. I understand David Braben was one of the supporters of the Pi. Elite really got me into all this.
We had this on the BBC B when I was very young. The first time I saw it my jaw dropped. I was like nothing I'd ever seen. To think now it was all running in 32K! For me this is the greatest game of all time...
Oh the memories that comes with this game. So many hours just spent flying around space, ferrying cargo, shooting pirates and all but one time crashing as I was trying to do dock with a station. You really did get the bang for your buck with this game.
Ah, one person flying, one on the keyboard and selecting music on the stereo (Hawkwind, Ozric Tentacles, Oroonies , The Orb to name e few soundtracks to our adventures)and one person making pots of tea and rolling joints. Loved this game.
I had this on my Commador 64, then on the Omega. I loved it and couldn't wait till school was over so I would rush home and play this for hours. Thanks for bringing back memories of an unbelievably wonderful childhood.
Thanks for this Scott. I was lucky enough to play test this all those years ago. I worked at a computer company back in the day right next door to the Acorn North West HQ. They gave us the game to test as we had all the various devices the BBC could have attached. We could get the ship to do a full stop with the Bit Stick and found that it would run no matter what you had attached. Great game, great times! P.S. Gratz on the Anniversary!
If I remember correctly, just the *screen* that Elite used on the BBC Micro used 10kB of RAM, leaving 22kB. And the BBC OS occupied another 4kB, leaving a grand total of 18kB for both the code and game workspace. (Plus, they also developed an awesome trick to change screen modes half-way down the screen, which is why the top is high-res B&W and the bottom is low-res. The psychedelic colours during hyperspace was done by replaying the launch animation, but with this system turned off, so you got to see the B&W framebuffer in colour.)
It cannot be overstated how much this game changed so many people's perspective on what computers were for and could do. Braben and Bell should have been knighted (different times of course). The efficiency of their coding was groundbreaking and has inspired so many others. Spent many hours on a Beeb B playing this when A level revision should have taken a higher priority... Only reached Deadly status before cars, beer and women became more appealing.
Thanks for the flashback, and making me feel old! I played a lot of Elite on the Commodore 64 when I was a kid too. Really loving your reviews of the Elite Dangerous development. it has the stuff we loved about the original game with all the beautiful updates that technology adds today. Happy Anniversary to you as well!
The Acorn Archimedes version was also considered as one of the best ports. I can confirm this as I spent ages on it! FYI you made 490 credits trading profit on your booze cruise and checking the prices, booze was the best option (along with slaves, also 14 credit profit/tonne). You could have also made a little bit extra on the precious metals and gemstones tho :) The big question though is don't I have anything better to do?
I had the NES version. I had a special technique to deal with the Thargoids(?) the aliens. Fly in close proximity, release a missile before they can EMP. I used to do bounty hunting with a bit of commerce on the side. The initial part before you buy a better laser is a chore but then the reward is great. What a jewel of a game.
Interesting factoid: all the objects in the original elite were so-called "convex objects"--in other words, they were designed in such a way that the lines making up the edges were either entirely visible or entirely hidden, so the game engine only had to check the endpoints of the line to decide if it should draw it or not. Didn't work if two ships overlapped each other, but that was a rare enough occurrence they could get away with it!
I remember this game...and at the time I found the graphics awesome...lol Because of this game i went later to wing commander...and sequals Now i am in elite dangerous
Great Vid !! Oh the Nostalgia. I first played this on my friends BBC then got it when it came out on my c64 (also played on friends spectrum), then elite plus - pc,still playing it ( on my pc last few years Elite TNK), now Elite Dangerous. Without Elite, computer gaming would not be what it is today. The innovation & new way of thinking about how games could be played, a hell of a lot is owed to this game & the ppl who made it. So Many ppl will never realise just how much !!
As a kid, I put years worth of time into this game. P.S. Happy Wedding Anniversary! P.P.S. Your wedding anniversary is on George RR Martin's birthday... well done.
David Braben and Ian Bell were the developers if I remember correctly. I bought it as soon as it came out on the Electron. It was damn hard to get hold of. I never made it to Elite (deadly or dangerous I think)but it was incredible at the time 👏👏👏
I had the Spectrum version back in 1985. I'm not surprised they there were so many pirates. The world you hyperspaced to was Multi-Government which was one above Feudal. With that amount of money you could've bought military lasers which were the best which you need for that mission. The Archimedes is supposed to be the best version. As soon as a I find a working emaultor, I'm gonna try that version of Elite on it.
Funny to see the similarities between elite: dangerous, which I've been playing for the past 2 years, and the og elite. That game was WAY ahead of its time, I'm not sure how any computer could run it
People complain about Elite: Dangerous for this reason or that, but at the end of the day, it's basically an adaptation of the original Elite, and that's all it needs to be tbh. It's gorgeous and has expanded gameplay basically directly influenced from the original game. Mastapiece 👌
Glorious. Always great to look at the Beeb version - especially after putting way too much time into a series on the C64 one (and boy, did I have a lot of fun hunting down that blasted Constrictor). Would love to see your take on that mission sometime :)
Never played the NES version, but surely Archimedes version is by far regarded as the best. Though NES perhaps the best 8 bit version (Archimedes being 32 bit). The original BBC B disc version is the most memorable though, given I played it so much.
Bitness is complicated, but the 68000 is a 16/32bit processor and in the peak gaming days the Amiga was talked about as 16bit though had 32bit registers, 16bit data bus and 24bit address bus. Was designed so you could write pure 32bit code so 32bit instructions and addressing and it would sort it out under the hood, but at a performance cost. As I understand it a lot of games were highly optimised to only need 16bit architecture and in particular aimed at the 24bit address bus. Similar thing with the Archimedes. The ARM2 & ARM3 were 32bit RISC processors but again 24bit address bus. Games were written for this, which is why a lot of old games don't run on modern ARM chips, such as in the Raspberry Pi even though it can run RISC OS. At least not without the author recompiling it to pure 32bit. Regardless though, the Archimedes Elite was a unique version that simply looked gorgeous and it played so well.
Tim Moore Only the Amiga 1000, 500, and 2000 used a 68000. The 1200 was an '020, the 3000 was an '030, and the 4000 was an '030 or '040 . Any of the 68000 Amigas could take an accelerator card and run pure 32-bit.
Loved playing this on my Micro. Younger guys will laugh at the graphics but back then they were state of the art and the game play was addictive. 2 main games stand out in my memory this and prince of Persia. Just bought the new elite dangerous and only playing solo mode currently but love it.
Fond memories of playing the Amiga port of this, though it's weird seeing it with just the wire-frame models and the minimalist graphical inputs. I remember how stern and angry all the people on the system information screens looked to my much younfer self :D
5:16: Known for lethal brandy and deadly tree ants. Sounds like a good place to raise a family... 16:27: Was the Constrictor also procedurally generated? What an awesome old game. Have fun on your anniversary thing!
For some reason, I never got my hands on Elite back in the day. But the one that was inspirational to me, and got me started similarly to what you described, was Starflight.
Its interesting how when the ship is turning at different points its like it renders faster 2:24 , Wonder if it has something to do with the lines being straight and faster to render, or just a design choice. Any case it looks like the FPS jumps up and down.
Aaahhh I lost a whole summer holidays playing the original elite on a bbc micro. The joys of hidden line 3d + tape loading and saving.....gosh I'm old 8O
Good point. But you don't often see this with video games, due to how limited the tech was back then. Normally when a 10-20yo game gets revived it has changed significantly, for the better. Look at Fallout for example. This has managed to stay exactly the same *thirty* years later and still be incredible.
Oddly enough, an old game I was most fond of on old computers was "The Halley Project" but it came in 1986 I think. I didnt play elite itself, but played another game which I cannot find the name anymore (tought it was starflight, but isn't). Now that I think about it, the oldest game I remember playing at a really young age was "Sea Dragon" on my father's TRS80. At any rate, happy b-day Elite! and thank you Scott for visiting old stuff for us. I love LP's/Demo's of these old games you do every now and then.
...Starship Command... where the disposition of the 'bosses' was proportional to the progress, ahem and demise, of your last ship... suitably level-headed, you might be granted control of a replacement ship.... the lingo conveyed feedback as to whether the boot was proximal, good ol' days they was!
@@RexRioch And I digged that other game name as well.. It was "Omnitrend Universe" - complex as eff but it had a awesome setting. Wow 7 years ago... Time flies.
With all seriousness the gameplay and atmosphere beats the hell out of most modern releases. I do hope that it's not just those us who grew up playing games in the 80s that feel this way.
I was six when this came out, it was the first game I ever played and the reason why I am who I am today (massive gamer geek and aspiring scifi author)! I remember playing an even more basic version than this one on my acorn electron, no fancy colours or messages when you docked, seriously simple! Also the tape deck wouldn't save the game (no disk drive available) so I had to leave the little machine on for ever. I got to dangerous when a power cut turned it off. I cried!
Mr Manley, thanks for sharing this! I "missed" Elite, but I had Frontier: Elite II... .. and I'd not been paying attention, so I managed to miss E:D launch! Looking into HOTAS at the mo, and planning to pick up E:D before Horizons launches! Cheers, sir. :)
Its amazing to think how far computers have come :) This is a little before my time but I remember in the Early 90`s using an old Spectrum, then an Amiga 900 then Sega Megadrive, then onto the first Playstation.......
There is a clone of it on ios called unknown or something like that. I am really sure but with a stupid name like unknown good luck getting any search results for it.
KlingonCaptain Disregard previous comments. You CAN get the original honest to God Elite on iOS on the App Store for free and there are multiple ways. One way is to download the Firebird Spectaculator which comes with elite prepackaged over ways are to look into zx spectrum emulators apps.
On the Commodore 64 version, I used the missile targeting system to give me hint when my lasers could also hit the target. Apart from that, the missiles were pretty useless since nearly every ship had an ECM system installed. Also, when launching a missile, you had to be careful not to shoot your own missile.
NOTE: this was incredibly useful when encountering a lot of enemies, IF you had a military laser installed. Usually, by targeting with your missiles then firing your lasers instead, you could destroy half or more when they were still just points in the distance, so that saved me half the amount of actual dogfighting.
It makes me so proud that games have advanced so far in only 30 years. I just wish they didn't keep stomping all over the older games with needless sequels.
Alexander the Ok made a very in depth 1 hour video of how this game managed to exist. For any computer geek out there, this is an absolutely impressive story. Check it out!
One of the best versions of Elite was ArcElite on the Acorn Archimedes. It had the addition of more ship types, plus ships you met could be doing things such as fighting amongst themselves or acting as escorts. wiki.alioth.net/index.php/Archimedes_Elite
I work at the national museum of computing here in England and I must say among all the classic games people might try to imagine this is the one that makes grown men suddenly turn into teenagers again and reminisce.
Quite often people sit down at the BBC's and other people come over and they chat and give advice about this thirty year old game as if it was a modern game. It really is so impressive to me to see what effect it has on people.
I am so old :(
I'm too young to know started on elite dangerous but it is amazing to me that the original came out in 1984 ten years before my birth I've been playing elite dangerous since 2016 when I discovered it
Yes, I have fond memories of this masterpiece, Also: Ikari Warriors, 1942, and R-type. 😁
:) The first PC game I ever played, on an army buddies rig in the late '80s... It was an easier time.
Normal sequels:
Some new things.
Upgraded graphics
Other goodies
Elite’s sequel:
HOLY SHIT
Both.
It's like a dropped pebble creating a tsunami.
Casually drops the whole damn galaxy into a game
the original elite is literally: "im limited by the technology of my time"
Made 36 years ago...
Still looks fun today.
They did this with just 22kb of memory. It's astounding.
I first came across this in June 1988 when I was 12 during a school activities week. It blew my mind. We got an Amiga A500+ in Christmas 1991. I saw Elite and got it in April 1992 and have been playing it since. I got an Amiga A600 in April 1994. I was impressed they used the Fibonacci series to generate the planets, very clever. Good use of maths. I help run a Code Club and thrilled my kids like programming. Use my Raspberry Pi to run my business. I understand David Braben was one of the supporters of the Pi. Elite really got me into all this.
We had this on the BBC B when I was very young. The first time I saw it my jaw dropped. I was like nothing I'd ever seen. To think now it was all running in 32K! For me this is the greatest game of all time...
Oh the memories that comes with this game. So many hours just spent flying around space, ferrying cargo, shooting pirates and all but one time crashing as I was trying to do dock with a station.
You really did get the bang for your buck with this game.
Ah, one person flying, one on the keyboard and selecting music on the stereo (Hawkwind, Ozric Tentacles, Oroonies , The Orb to name e few soundtracks to our adventures)and one person making pots of tea and rolling joints. Loved this game.
I had this on my Commador 64, then on the Omega. I loved it and couldn't wait till school was over so I would rush home and play this for hours. Thanks for bringing back memories of an unbelievably wonderful childhood.
Thanks for this Scott. I was lucky enough to play test this all those years ago. I worked at a computer company back in the day right next door to the Acorn North West HQ. They gave us the game to test as we had all the various devices the BBC could have attached.
We could get the ship to do a full stop with the Bit Stick and found that it would run no matter what you had attached.
Great game, great times!
P.S. Gratz on the Anniversary!
extremely impressed with what they managed 30 years ago :o
A great little look back into a game that inspired so many of us as kids. Nice job, Scott, and happy 30th to Elite :D
I have a feeling that processing the sound of Scott Manley's voice would take more power than the original Elite.
lol probably
***** you sure? his picture is only 20KB, full size
If I remember correctly, just the *screen* that Elite used on the BBC Micro used 10kB of RAM, leaving 22kB. And the BBC OS occupied another 4kB, leaving a grand total of 18kB for both the code and game workspace.
(Plus, they also developed an awesome trick to change screen modes half-way down the screen, which is why the top is high-res B&W and the bottom is low-res. The psychedelic colours during hyperspace was done by replaying the launch animation, but with this system turned off, so you got to see the B&W framebuffer in colour.)
It cannot be overstated how much this game changed so many people's perspective on what computers were for and could do. Braben and Bell should have been knighted (different times of course). The efficiency of their coding was groundbreaking and has inspired so many others.
Spent many hours on a Beeb B playing this when A level revision should have taken a higher priority... Only reached Deadly status before cars, beer and women became more appealing.
Thanks for the flashback, and making me feel old! I played a lot of Elite on the Commodore 64 when I was a kid too. Really loving your reviews of the Elite Dangerous development. it has the stuff we loved about the original game with all the beautiful updates that technology adds today. Happy Anniversary to you as well!
The Acorn Archimedes version was also considered as one of the best ports. I can confirm this as I spent ages on it!
FYI you made 490 credits trading profit on your booze cruise and checking the prices, booze was the best option (along with slaves, also 14 credit profit/tonne). You could have also made a little bit extra on the precious metals and gemstones tho :) The big question though is don't I have anything better to do?
I had the NES version. I had a special technique to deal with the Thargoids(?) the aliens. Fly in close proximity, release a missile before they can EMP. I used to do bounty hunting with a bit of commerce on the side. The initial part before you buy a better laser is a chore but then the reward is great.
What a jewel of a game.
You are forever popping up with Videos of things I'm interested in and have been for years and years now. Keep creating!
Interesting factoid: all the objects in the original elite were so-called "convex objects"--in other words, they were designed in such a way that the lines making up the edges were either entirely visible or entirely hidden, so the game engine only had to check the endpoints of the line to decide if it should draw it or not. Didn't work if two ships overlapped each other, but that was a rare enough occurrence they could get away with it!
Elite was/is just mind blowing.. It will be looked back on in 200, 300+ years in the same way we admire old works of art and literature now.
Happy anniversary to you, and to elite! Thanks for sharing.
"Our sun is going nova! Will you save us?"
I remember this game...and at the time I found the graphics awesome...lol
Because of this game i went later to wing commander...and sequals
Now i am in elite dangerous
+razorlord2 I played WC and more than that, Privateer! ;)
Great Vid !! Oh the Nostalgia. I first played this on my friends BBC then got it when it came out on my c64 (also played on friends spectrum), then elite plus - pc,still playing it ( on my pc last few years Elite TNK), now Elite Dangerous.
Without Elite, computer gaming would not be what it is today. The innovation & new way of thinking about how games could be played, a hell of a lot is owed to this game & the ppl who made it. So Many ppl will never realise just how much !!
9:23 it's not ASP Explorer, it's ASP MK2! You can clearly tell from the lack of back stabilisers.
As a kid, I put years worth of time into this game.
P.S. Happy Wedding Anniversary!
P.P.S. Your wedding anniversary is on George RR Martin's birthday... well done.
The nostalgia! I played this when I was around 10 on the ZX Spectrum 48k
BBC Micro was my first PC, nostalgia attack.
David Braben and Ian Bell were the developers if I remember correctly. I bought it as soon as it came out on the Electron. It was damn hard to get hold of. I never made it to Elite (deadly or dangerous I think)but it was incredible at the time 👏👏👏
I had the Spectrum version back in 1985. I'm not surprised they there were so many pirates. The world you hyperspaced to was Multi-Government which was one above Feudal. With that amount of money you could've bought military lasers which were the best which you need for that mission. The Archimedes is supposed to be the best version. As soon as a I find a working emaultor, I'm gonna try that version of Elite on it.
Awesome ... thank you ..... and now we actually sit in the cockpit in VR. I've died and gone to heaven !!
Funny to see the similarities between elite: dangerous, which I've been playing for the past 2 years, and the og elite. That game was WAY ahead of its time, I'm not sure how any computer could run it
People complain about Elite: Dangerous for this reason or that, but at the end of the day, it's basically an adaptation of the original Elite, and that's all it needs to be tbh. It's gorgeous and has expanded gameplay basically directly influenced from the original game. Mastapiece 👌
Glorious.
Always great to look at the Beeb version - especially after putting way too much time into a series on the C64 one (and boy, did I have a lot of fun hunting down that blasted Constrictor).
Would love to see your take on that mission sometime :)
Happy Anniversary, Scott! Also happy wedding anniversary!
Never played the NES version, but surely Archimedes version is by far regarded as the best. Though NES perhaps the best 8 bit version (Archimedes being 32 bit). The original BBC B disc version is the most memorable though, given I played it so much.
I played it on the Amiga I believe.
This game was the reason I bought a disk drive for my BBC B. And worth every penny!
The Amiga version would have been 32-bit as well. AmigaOS was a 32-bit preemptive multitasking OS from day one.
Bitness is complicated, but the 68000 is a 16/32bit processor and in the peak gaming days the Amiga was talked about as 16bit though had 32bit registers, 16bit data bus and 24bit address bus. Was designed so you could write pure 32bit code so 32bit instructions and addressing and it would sort it out under the hood, but at a performance cost. As I understand it a lot of games were highly optimised to only need 16bit architecture and in particular aimed at the 24bit address bus.
Similar thing with the Archimedes. The ARM2 & ARM3 were 32bit RISC processors but again 24bit address bus. Games were written for this, which is why a lot of old games don't run on modern ARM chips, such as in the Raspberry Pi even though it can run RISC OS. At least not without the author recompiling it to pure 32bit.
Regardless though, the Archimedes Elite was a unique version that simply looked gorgeous and it played so well.
Tim Moore Only the Amiga 1000, 500, and 2000 used a 68000. The 1200 was an '020, the 3000 was an '030, and the 4000 was an '030 or '040
. Any of the 68000 Amigas could take an accelerator card and run pure 32-bit.
Loved playing this on my Micro.
Younger guys will laugh at the graphics but back then they were state of the art and the game play was addictive.
2 main games stand out in my memory this and prince of Persia.
Just bought the new elite dangerous and only playing solo mode currently but love it.
WoW this video brings back soooo many good memories of playing this wayyy back in the day. sighhhhh
I played this in High School, it was so fun
40th! and Elite still the most complex project for a 8 bit game! PURE LEGEND
Happy Anniversary, Scott.
Loved it! Thanks for that. Playing Elite Dangerous Beta now. It's really going to be a great game. It's got the complete *feel* of Elite.
Happy anniversary, Scott! Have fun with your vacation!
Shouldn't you have said "Have fun with your wife." ?
Your almost at 1 mill my guy, congrats. Your subs say 999k for me rn
Happy Anniversary, Scott!
Fond memories of playing the Amiga port of this, though it's weird seeing it with just the wire-frame models and the minimalist graphical inputs. I remember how stern and angry all the people on the system information screens looked to my much younfer self :D
Love this vid, just hunted it down so I could add it to my playlist on my new channel for others to find.
Happy Anniversary Scott!!
Happy Wedding Anniversary, Scott!
Congrats to you and Mrs. Manley!
5:16: Known for lethal brandy and deadly tree ants. Sounds like a good place to raise a family...
16:27: Was the Constrictor also procedurally generated?
What an awesome old game.
Have fun on your anniversary thing!
The constrictor mission was one of the scripted events. I think they appeared randomly though.
I could run Elite on my Arduino...
This is some potential.
Happy annaversary to you and Elite.
We had a bunch of BBC model B's in our maths classroom at school. First computer I ever used.
Happy anniversary! Love your content
I can't believe you love Elite so much you got married on Sept 20th!
Loved this game back in the 80's, I remember it was always hard to get the game started though.
I love how this is like 99.99% the same as Elite - Dangerous lol
No, Elite Dangerous is the same as this. :)
You must be kidding me. :\
@@jackfraser1807 play the original :)
Im gaming in E3
For some reason, I never got my hands on Elite back in the day. But the one that was inspirational to me, and got me started similarly to what you described, was Starflight.
Best English accent EU
He is scotlan
cheatmongul
He did an English accent during the video...
JMan Pepper oh my bad i guess i didn't notice.
cheatmongul
Admitting your mistake on youtube :O You sir are a rare breed
JMan Pepper People have a nasty habit of reading comments before watching the video, it leads to all sorts of misunderstandings.
What an amazing game! Those were the days when developers had to put all their coins into FUN given the limitations of technology.
Its interesting how when the ship is turning at different points its like it renders faster 2:24 , Wonder if it has something to do with the lines being straight and faster to render, or just a design choice.
Any case it looks like the FPS jumps up and down.
I played this on the Amstrad cpc464..i was playing this at home while my friends were playing defender at the arcades...thanks for the flash back...
Aaahhh I lost a whole summer holidays playing the original elite on a bbc micro. The joys of hidden line 3d + tape loading and saving.....gosh I'm old 8O
Could use some anti-aliasing XD
Loved this game. You only have a front laser...gotta get them all around 😂 Nice vid.
My high school years were awesome playing Elite!
Mother of God... who wishes games were still like this it looks so good!
Congrats on your anniversary by the way!
Interesting to see how far we've come in just 30 years
Happy Anniversary! Have a nice holiday
I remember playing this on a Spectrum. I also played the BBC version at work good days.
I can't believe how well this exact formula from 30 years ago still works today simply with prettier graphics. Amazing.
Chess are still working to...after few thousand of years :)
Good point. But you don't often see this with video games, due to how limited the tech was back then. Normally when a 10-20yo game gets revived it has changed significantly, for the better. Look at Fallout for example. This has managed to stay exactly the same *thirty* years later and still be incredible.
Oddly enough, an old game I was most fond of on old computers was "The Halley Project" but it came in 1986 I think. I didnt play elite itself, but played another game which I cannot find the name anymore (tought it was starflight, but isn't). Now that I think about it, the oldest game I remember playing at a really young age was "Sea Dragon" on my father's TRS80.
At any rate, happy b-day Elite! and thank you Scott for visiting old stuff for us. I love LP's/Demo's of these old games you do every now and then.
...Starship Command... where the disposition of the 'bosses' was proportional to the progress, ahem and demise, of your last ship... suitably level-headed, you might be granted control of a replacement ship.... the lingo conveyed feedback as to whether the boot was proximal, good ol' days they was!
@@RexRioch And I digged that other game name as well.. It was "Omnitrend Universe" - complex as eff but it had a awesome setting. Wow 7 years ago... Time flies.
I remember loading Elite on my Commodore 64 from cassette tape ... well worth the 20 minute wait!
Classic Elite. Sweet sweet memories.
This brings back some memories. I played this constanty as a kid. The trick is to mount a rear facing weapon and run away ;)
With all seriousness the gameplay and atmosphere beats the hell out of most modern releases. I do hope that it's not just those us who grew up playing games in the 80s that feel this way.
I was six when this came out, it was the first game I ever played and the reason why I am who I am today (massive gamer geek and aspiring scifi author)! I remember playing an even more basic version than this one on my acorn electron, no fancy colours or messages when you docked, seriously simple! Also the tape deck wouldn't save the game (no disk drive available) so I had to leave the little machine on for ever. I got to dangerous when a power cut turned it off. I cried!
Mr Manley, thanks for sharing this!
I "missed" Elite, but I had Frontier: Elite II...
.. and I'd not been paying attention, so I managed to miss E:D launch!
Looking into HOTAS at the mo, and planning to pick up E:D before Horizons launches!
Cheers, sir. :)
Its amazing to think how far computers have come :) This is a little before my time but I remember in the Early 90`s using an old Spectrum, then an Amiga 900 then Sega Megadrive, then onto the first Playstation.......
Wow, the graphics are surprisingly good and "2&1/2D" for a 30 year old game! Is this available on an app store?
There is a clone of it on ios called unknown or something like that. I am really sure but with a stupid name like unknown good luck getting any search results for it.
I found a really good Android remake called Alite and Scott Manly found a PC remake called Oolite.
KlingonCaptain Disregard previous comments. You CAN get the original honest to God Elite on iOS on the App Store for free and there are multiple ways. One way is to download the Firebird Spectaculator which comes with elite prepackaged over ways are to look into zx spectrum emulators apps.
@@KlingonCaptain Check Elite Dangerous
@@spynorbays I literally just bought the bundle with Horizons on a holiday sale for $20 about a week ago. 😁
Right on commander Manley and congratulations. Happy birthday Elite! Sadly no Dragon 32 version (yet) though!
Happy anniversary Scoot :3
Happy Anniversary!
Watching this in 1080p HD is the most hilarious thing I have ever done.
Slow down! It's so much easier to keep targets in the cross-hairs at a slow speed.
On the Commodore 64 version, I used the missile targeting system to give me hint when my lasers could also hit the target. Apart from that, the missiles were pretty useless since nearly every ship had an ECM system installed. Also, when launching a missile, you had to be careful not to shoot your own missile.
NOTE: this was incredibly useful when encountering a lot of enemies, IF you had a military laser installed. Usually, by targeting with your missiles then firing your lasers instead, you could destroy half or more when they were still just points in the distance, so that saved me half the amount of actual dogfighting.
I played many hours of this on my Tandy back in the day.
It makes me so proud that games have advanced so far in only 30 years. I just wish they didn't keep stomping all over the older games with needless sequels.
Thanks for this, Scott. Unfortunately, I never got to experience the original!
Scott Manley Happy anaversarry to you and to your wife, have a nice one. :)
2:43 By XOR do you mean bit-wise exclusive OR?
Yes, I believe so. So, with 1 as white and 0 as black:
1 xor 0 = 1
1 xor 1 = 0
0 xor 0 = 0
0 xor 1 = 1
You should try it on the acorn electron with 16K memory. It was still a great game even with only 4 enemy ships and no missions and no colour.
These graphics made Starfox for SNES look good.
Actually, I wouldn't be surprised if some inspiration was taken from this.
I came here from palying X-Beyond the Frontier which was considered a modern successor of Elite in its time... really awesome :D
I had a BBC Master and got this game late (maybe 1990?) but could never figure out how to save the game, so had to start over each time!
Hmm it'd be fun to port to STM32. Wonder if I could get it in 32kB!
Is this the Odyssey expansion?
Alexander the Ok made a very in depth 1 hour video of how this game managed to exist. For any computer geek out there, this is an absolutely impressive story. Check it out!
One of the best versions of Elite was ArcElite on the Acorn Archimedes. It had the addition of more ship types, plus ships you met could be doing things such as fighting amongst themselves or acting as escorts. wiki.alioth.net/index.php/Archimedes_Elite
CRT displays tended to flatter the graphics making the flickering far less noticeable
I played the archemides version way too much... great memories, commander.