Industry | Video games |
---|---|
Fate | Defunct |
Founded | 1985 |
Defunct | 1989 |
Key people | Rod Cousens, Paul Cooper |
Products | Spindizzy (1986) Aliens: The Computer Game (1986) R-Type (1988) |
Electric Dreams Software was a UK-based video game publisher established in 1985 by Activision[1] and run by Rod Cousens and Paul Cooper formerly of Quicksilva .[2] The company published video games for the ZX Spectrum,[3] Commodore 64, Amstrad CPC[4] and the Atari 8-bit family of computers [5] between 1985 and 1989, becoming one of the top eight UK software houses by 1987.[1]
In late 1986, the label was adapted by the American division to publish titles outside of England for the American market.[6]
The publisher's in-house video game developer was Software Studios, set up in April 1986 and run by John Dean and Dave Cummings. Software Studios also handled Activision's products marketed in countries outside the United States. The concept behind this team was to pool resources and ideas between all Electric Dreams projects, but they were also directly responsible for two film tie-in licenses, Aliens: The Computer Game (1986) and Big Trouble in Little China.[1]
The company's initial releases were Riddler's Den and I, Of the Mask.[7]
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric Dreams Software.
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