Geek With Social Skills | Commodore 64 Dot Gobbler Pac-Man Clone by OEM Mr. Computer Products C64 @geekwithsocialskills | Uploaded October 2020 | Updated October 2024, 1 hour ago.
In this video I showcase my C64 Dot Gobbler Pac-Man clone game cartridges for the Commodore 64 computer that were released by Machine Language Games and OEM/Mr. Computer Products.
We also take a look at game play variations, cartridge and label variations along with comparing them to the Atari Soft Pac-Man game cartridge officially released by Commodore in 1983.
Now for some fun facts about OEM/Mr. Computer Products, these C64 cartridges, the person who programmed them and how were they sold and distributed.
Dr. Karl Stapelfeldt programmed Dot Gobbler back in 1981 while he was in college. He had a summer job at a computer store in Fort Pierce, FL named "Your Basic Computer Store". The owner of the store, Blake Wilson, published the games. "Machine Language Games" was Wilson's company.
Apparently Machine Language Games was somewhat related to OEM/Mr. Computer Products, but they were not one and the same, although Blake Wilson and Carl Kennaugh (founder and president of OEM) were business partners of sorts for a while.
--- Video Links
Gideon's Ultimate 64 Elite:
ultimate64.com/Ultimate-64-Elite
EasyFlash 3 cartridge:
store.go4retro.com/easyflash-3
--- Channel Links
Subscribe: youtube.com/geekwithsocialskills?sub_confirmation=1
#Commodore #C64 #Game
In this video I showcase my C64 Dot Gobbler Pac-Man clone game cartridges for the Commodore 64 computer that were released by Machine Language Games and OEM/Mr. Computer Products.
We also take a look at game play variations, cartridge and label variations along with comparing them to the Atari Soft Pac-Man game cartridge officially released by Commodore in 1983.
Now for some fun facts about OEM/Mr. Computer Products, these C64 cartridges, the person who programmed them and how were they sold and distributed.
Dr. Karl Stapelfeldt programmed Dot Gobbler back in 1981 while he was in college. He had a summer job at a computer store in Fort Pierce, FL named "Your Basic Computer Store". The owner of the store, Blake Wilson, published the games. "Machine Language Games" was Wilson's company.
Apparently Machine Language Games was somewhat related to OEM/Mr. Computer Products, but they were not one and the same, although Blake Wilson and Carl Kennaugh (founder and president of OEM) were business partners of sorts for a while.
--- Video Links
Gideon's Ultimate 64 Elite:
ultimate64.com/Ultimate-64-Elite
EasyFlash 3 cartridge:
store.go4retro.com/easyflash-3
--- Channel Links
Subscribe: youtube.com/geekwithsocialskills?sub_confirmation=1
#Commodore #C64 #Game