The next two releases were for 48K machines only, and arrived in 1984, Lunar Jetman, a follow up to Jetpac, and Atic Atac. With the more generous memory limits both games were stunning. Jetman took the Jetpac idea a stage further. Atic Atac introduced the famous ACG (Ashby Computer Graphics) keys in another ground breaking game, that was perhaps one of the most payable so far, but these successes spelt the end of the £5.95 price tag as Ultimate prepared to release Sabre Wulf also on the Commodre 64.
Click the sleeves for more information
Jetman Sleeve

Atic Atac - A.C.G. © 1983
48K Sinclair Spectrum




Collect the fragments
of the A.C.G. key
avoid the monsters
and escape.

Download Atic Atac
23.2K in SNA format
compressed in a ZIP file.
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