Released in 1985 on DOS. It's an action and puzzle game, set in an arcade theme. You move the pointer, in order to fill a percentage of place:
a) without other dots must touch your line before reach your area,
b) without touching your line at back.
A sliding puzzle game based on the Urusei Yatsura anime.
Initially published as "Lum no Jigsaw" as a feature on a tape bundled with the December 1983 issue of Popcom, a magazine focused on Japanese personal computers. It was later released with additional puzzles as a commercial product in 1985 as Urusei Yatsura CG Puzzle.
A Train based arcade game released for the BBC Micro. With action stages where you platform across the roof of the train and try to stop coffee cups from falling of desks.
Othello board game for BBC Micro. At the start of each game the players place four counters at the center of the board. Thereafter the players take it in turns to place a counter with their own colour face up on an empty square in such a way there are at least one counter of the opposite colour sandwiched between it and another of the player's colour in either a horizontal, vertical or diagonal direction.
Citadel is a platform game with some puzzle solving elements. The game is centered around a castle, requiring players to find five hidden crystals and return them to their rightful place. Outside of the castle there are outside areas (including a wasteland, a pyramid, a sea and an island).
Othello (オセロ) is a SG-1000 video game based on the board game Othello.
Two versions of Othello exist for the SG-1000. The first version, released in 1983, was built into the Othello Multivision (which is where the system gets its name from). Sega would later re-release this game in cartridge form in 1985, offering significant graphical and AI improvements over Tsukuda Original's version.
The objective of the game is to take the opposing king. When the king cannot avoid being caught on the next move, the game is over. They say the king is "Matt". The shogi opposes two players who take turns playing. The Shogi chess board is called Shogi Ban ("Shogi table") and has 81 squares (9 x 9), the three rows furthest from the players constituting their promotion area. At the start of the game each player has 20 pieces: a king, a rook, a bishop, two gold generals, two silver generals, two horsemen, two spears, and nine pawns.