Federation of Free Traders

Last updated
Federation of Free Traders
Federation Of Free Traders Box Art.jpg
Publisher(s) Gremlin Graphics
Composer(s) Ben Daglish [1]
Platform(s) Amiga, Atari ST
Release
Mode(s) Single-player

Federation of Free Traders is a space trading video game released in 1989 for the Amiga and Atari ST. [2] [3] The game is similar in scope to Elite , involving space simulation and exploration tilted towards trading. The player is tasked with exploring and discovering the billions of procedurally generated galaxies and planets. The game was developed and published by Gremlin Interactive. [1]

Contents

Reception

See also

Related Research Articles

<i>Chaos Strikes Back</i> 1989 video game

Chaos Strikes Back is an expansion and sequel to Dungeon Master, the earlier 3D role-playing video game. Chaos Strikes Back was released in 1989 and is also available on several platforms. It uses the same engine as Dungeon Master, with new graphics and a new, far more challenging, dungeon.

<i>Frontier: Elite II</i> 1993 video game

Frontier: Elite II is a space trading and combat simulator video game written by David Braben and published by GameTek and Konami in October 1993 and released on the Amiga, Atari ST and DOS. It is the first sequel to the seminal game Elite from 1984.

Artworx was a Naples, Florida software company that produced and supported a line of computer games from 1981 to 2015. It is named after the founder's given name. At first the company published a variety of games, including titles in adventure and arcade-action genres, but were later best known for a strip poker series.

<i>California Games II</i> 1990 video game

California Games II is a sports video game released by Epyx for MS-DOS in 1990. Versions were published for the Amiga, Atari ST, and Super Nintendo Entertainment System in 1992, then the Master System in 1993. This game is a sequel to California Games. An Atari Lynx version was announced and previewed in several magazines but was never released.

<i>RoadBlasters</i> 1987 video game

RoadBlasters is a combat racing video game released in arcades by Atari Games in 1987. In RoadBlasters, the player must navigate an armed sports car through 50 different rally races, getting to the finish line before running out of fuel.

<i>Time Bandit</i> 1983 video game

Time Bandit is a maze shoot 'em up written for the TRS-80 Model I by Bill Dunlevy and Harry Lafnear and published by MichTron in 1983. It was ported to the TRS-80 Color Computer and Dragon 32, but enjoyed its greatest popularity several years later as an early release for the Atari ST. It was also released for the pseudo-PC-compatible Sanyo MBC-55x with 8-color display. Amiga and MS-DOS versions were ported by Timothy Purves.

<i>Roller Coaster Rumbler</i> 1989 video game

Roller Coaster Rumbler is a rail shooter video game. It was designed by Subway Software for British publisher Tynesoft, which published it in 1989. Versions appeared on MS-DOS, Amiga, Atari ST and Commodore 64 with quality varying greatly among them.

<i>Monty Pythons Flying Circus: The Computer Game</i> 1990 video game

Monty Python's Flying Circus: The Computer Game is a 1990 scrolling shoot 'em up video game developed by Core Design. It was released by Virgin Games the Amiga, Commodore 64, Amstrad CPC, and the ZX Spectrum. It is loosely based on material and characters from the 1970s British comedy series Monty Python's Flying Circus, in particular the Gumby character.

<i>Purple Saturn Day</i> 1989 video game

Purple Saturn Day is a space-themed Olympic sports game. It was created by ERE Informatique and published by Epyx in 1989.

<i>Wicked</i> (video game) 1989 video game

Wicked is a real-time strategy horror-themed video game released for the Amiga, Atari ST, and Commodore 64 in 1989 by Binary Vision and Electric Dreams Software. Activision had intended to release the game for MS-DOS with EGA graphics in 1989, but the port was cancelled.

<i>E.S.S. Mega</i> 1991 video game

E.S.S Mega is a space simulation game published by Tomahawk and developed by Coktel Vision. E.S.S. Mega recreates ESA's space vehicle concepts of the early 1990, specially the Hermes Shuttle. The game was released for MS-DOS and Atari ST in 1991, and Commodore CDTV in 1992.

<i>Axels Magic Hammer</i> 1989 video game

Axel's Magic Hammer is a platform game developed by Core Design and published by Gremlin Graphics in 1989. The game was released for the Amiga and Atari ST.

<i>Infestation</i> (video game) 1990 action-adventure video game

Infestation is a first-person action-adventure game released in 1990. The game was published by Psygnosis and released for the Amiga, Atari ST, and DOS. Based on a science fiction scenario inspired in part by the films Alien and Aliens, the player must rid a planetoid of insectoid alien life forms.

<i>Kid Gloves</i> (video game) 1990 platforming video game

Kid Gloves is a 1990 computer game for the Amiga and Atari ST published by Millennium Interactive. A flick-screen platform game, Kid Gloves involves the player progressing through a series of themed single-screen stages. The game was cover-mounted on the second issue of Amiga Power magazine in 1991.

<i>Gravity</i> (video game) 1990 science-fiction strategy video game

Gravity is an isometric game for the Amiga and Atari ST published by Image Works in 1991. It combines action and strategy elements in a science fiction setting.

<i>StarRay</i> 1988 video game

StarRay is a video game developed by Hidden Treasures and published by Logotron in 1988. Released for the Amiga, Atari ST, and Commodore 64, the game is an update on the concept of 1981 arcade game Defender, with faster gameplay and more detailed graphics and sound. The game was published in 1989 by Epyx as Revenge of Defender for the American market.

<i>Vroom</i> (video game) 1991 video game

Vroom is a 1991 racing game developed and published by Lankhor and programmed by Daniel Macré. It was first released in 1991 for the Atari ST and later for the Amiga and MS-DOS. Vroom has released other formats Vroom Data Disk and Vroom Multiplayer.

<i>Legend of Djel</i> 1989 video game

Legend of Djel is an adventure game developed by Coktel Vision and Inférence and published in 1989 by Tomahawk for Amiga, Atari ST, and MS-DOS.

<i>Mickey Mouse: The Computer Game</i> 1988 video game

Mickey Mouse: The Computer Game, also known as just Mickey Mouse, is an action game developed and published by Gremlin Graphics in 1988 for the Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, and ZX Spectrum.

<i>Chambers of Shaolin</i> 1989 video game

Chambers of Shaolin is a 1989 beat 'em up video game first released for the Amiga then ported to the Atari ST and Commodore 64. The game was inspired by the 1978 film The 36th Chamber of Shaolin.

References

  1. 1 2 "Federation Of Free Traders: Hall Of Light – The database of Amiga games". hol.abime.net.
  2. "Atari ST FoFT - Federation of Free Traders: scans, dump, download, screenshots, ads, videos, catalog, instructions, roms". www.atarimania.com. Retrieved 2017-10-04.
  3. "Federation of Free Traders review from Amiga Format 2 (Sep 1989) - Amiga Magazine Rack". amr.abime.net.
  4. Game review, Zzap! magazine issue 51, July 1989, page 75