Novagen Software Ltd
IndustryVideo games
Headquarters,
ProductsComputer games

Novagen Software Ltd (commonly referred to as Novagen) was a British software developer which released a number of computer games on a variety of platforms from the mid-1980s to the early 1990s.

The company was set up by Paul Woakes and Bruce Jordan[2] and employed approximately 18 people.[3] In addition to running Novagen, Paul Woakes also developed and programmed the vast majority of the company's products and the first version of a custom loading scheme that worked ten times faster than Commodore's own, which became Novaload.[4][5][6]

Games

  • Encounter! (1983) Atari 8-bit, (1984) C64[7]
  • Mercenary (1985) Atari 8-bit, C64,[8] C16, Plus/4, ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC, Amiga, Atari ST
    • Mercenary: The Second City (1986) expansion pack for Mercenary
  • Mercenary Compendium Edition (1987) Mercenary + The Second City
  • Backlash (1988) Amiga, Atari ST[9]
  • Battle Island (1988) C64[10]
  • Hell Bent (1989) Amiga, Atari ST[11]
  • Damocles: Mercenary II (1990) Amiga, Atari ST
    • Damocles: Mission Disk 1 (1991) Amiga, Atari ST
    • Damocles: Mission Disk 2 (1991) Amiga, Atari ST
  • Damocles Compendium Edition (1991) Damocles + Mission Disk 1 + Mission Disk 2
  • Encounter (1991) Amiga, Atari ST
  • Mercenary III (1992)[12] Amiga, Atari ST

References

  1. "The Novagen office".
  2. "The Making of Mercenary".
  3. "The Novagen team".
  4. "The Making of Mercenary". www.sockmonsters.com. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
  5. retroreactiv8 (8 February 2018). "Paul Woakes: a tribute". RetroReactiv8. Retrieved 22 August 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. "Commodore Computing International - Vol 07 No 03 (1988-11)(Croftward)(GB) - page 9 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming". Internet Archive. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
  7. "Redirecting".
  8. "Impossible to Display Scan".
  9. "Backlash review from AUI Vol 2 No 2 (Feb 1988) - Amiga Magazine Rack".
  10. "Impossible to Display Scan".
  11. "Hellbent review from The One for 16-bit Games 5 (Feb 1989) - Amiga Magazine Rack".
  12. "Mercenary III: The Dion Crisis is the Game Most Worth Saving from 1992". Rock Paper Shotgun.


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