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Richard Shepherd Software

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Richard Shepherd Software Ltd
Company typePrivate
IndustryVideo games
FoundedFebruary 1982
FounderRichard Shepherd
Defunct1985 (1985)
FateFolded
Headquarters,
Key people
Richard Shepherd, Pete Cooke
ProductsUrban Upstart, Everest Ascent

Richard Shepherd Software was a British software house active between 1982 and 1985. The company was mainly known for releasing text adventure games.[1] These were programmed by Richard Shepherd himself and Pete Cooke.

History

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Richard Shepherd had worked as an accountant and taught himself programming on a ZX81 in his spare time.[2] During this time his wife Elaine took an interest in text adventure games. Upon her disappointment about a purchased game Richard suggested writing their own. Their company started out in February 1982 from the Shepherd's dining room in their house in Maidenhead. Its first product was Bargain Bytes, a collection of games and utilities for the ZX81. Due to the release of the ZX81's successor ZX Spectrum in April 1982 the company had to switch to the new machine. A major step for the company was when retailer WHSmith ordered the adventure Transylvanian Tower for its stores in February 1983. At this point Richard Shepherd quit his daytime job and focused on the software company. The company moved into an office in Slough and hired the first employees.

Richard Shepherd's finance utility, Cash Controller, was the first Spectrum program to be designed to work with the ZX Microdrive.[3]

In 1991 an issue of Amstrad Action (May, No. 68 p. 70) published an artillery game type-in program called Warzone. Consisting of 144 lines of code, the author was noted down as one "Richard Shephard down Bristol way".

List of publications

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References

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  1. ^ "Ski Star 2000 review". CRASH (14): 120. March 1985.
  2. ^ "The spare-time sideline that took off". Home Computing Weekly. London: Argus Specialist Publications. 30 August 1983. p. 29. Retrieved 2022-05-05.
  3. ^ "Software News". ZX Computing (8402): 84. February–March 1984.
  4. ^ "Cash Controller at Spectrum Computing - Sinclair ZX Spectrum games, software and hardware".
  5. ^ "Your Spectrum 15 - Joystick Jury".
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