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1998-11-02
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****************************************************************************
ENTERTAINMENT DEMOS
****************************************************************************
All demos on this CD are supplied as Magic Shadow Archives. A large number
of ST demos run directly from the bootsector and have no visible executable
files present on the disk. It was therefore impossible to distribute them in
any other manner. In order to make use of them, you will have to adopt one
of the following approaches:-
ST - Use the Magic Shadow Archiver program supplied in the ST folder to write
the individual archives back to floppy disks.
PC - Use the supplied Pacifist or Winston emulators in the PC folder to run
the archives as if they were real floppies.
Mac - Use the supplied Nostalgia or PowerST emulators to run the archives as
if they were real floppies.
****************************************************************************
DEM.07 The classic Bird Animation. Fujiboink - Brilliant demo using Atari
logo symbol. Newsin - Graphics demo. Mono Demo - Amazing graphics for mono
systems only.
DEM.08C Musical slideshow by Audio Light Inc. Will play through monitor or
via midi port. Colour only.
DEM.11C Shiny Bubbles by Xanth computers. This is a classic demo which uses
a whole disk and the graphics are of a quality usually seen on mini and
mainframe computers.
DEM.12 Graphics demo disk. Includes C source code. Atarilog - Sample.prg
from language disk. Boink - Bouncing ball demo. Bounce - Similar to Boink.
Colour 512 - Shows all 512 colours on screen at once. Cube, Cubemanu - 3D
cube animation. Gemdem - Graphic demo using GEM. Not STE. Doodle - Art
program. Various graphics demos.
DEM.17C Digidrum demo - A sample of what you can do with Digidrum by 2-bit
systems. Old MacDonald's Farm as you've never heard it before.
DEM.20 ST Tour - An on screen tutorial for new ST users.
DEM.32C Musical Slideshow - Sound and vision demo by the Amazing Cracking
Conspiracy (ACC). This is their second demo.
DEM.33C Steely Boink - Taking shiny bubbles that ultimate one step further.
Needs 1 Meg ram.
DEM.34M California Girls by the Denise Team. Spectacular special effects.
Needs 1 Meg ram and. Not STE.
DEM.35C Cyberscape - A "film" of a disk's journey to an ST's internal drive.
Truly outstanding quality. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.39C The BIG demo by The Exceptions. This disk has over 50 pieces of
music lasting over 4 hours. It also has five graphics screens, 2.5 miles of
scrolling text and six digitised soundtracks!
DEM.43C Ani-ST (UTL.187) animations by Bob Chewter. The first demo is of two
studio lamps juggling a ball between them and the second is a demo of waste
disposal on the Desktop.
DEM.47 Graphics demos in Logo, C and Pascal with source code included. Wire
frame drawing utility in Fast Basic (compiled) with source code. 3D wire
frame animation in GFA Basic (compiled).
DEM.48C The Amiga Sonix Demo by TEX. Seven pieces of Amiga Music ported
across to the ST. Your ST WILL replay these identically to the Amiga. Single
sided.
DEM.52C Newton's Cradle from Trivision - An excellent animation done with
the Spectrum 512 paint program. 1 Meg memory needed. Runs at 60Hz so it
won't work on some TVs.
DEM.53C Cyber Paint animations. Backflipping Skeleton, Globe, Bounce. Needs
1 Meg.
DEM.55C Cyber Paint animations. Bugsplin, Buzzbee, Warp and Write. Single
sided.
DEM.56C Cyber Paint animations. Autogyro and MV-Men. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.60 Murray and Me - An experiment in artificial intelligence. Murray is
an animated cartoon who interacts with the user. This demo is outstanding
but mono only (mono emulator included). Colourshock - Hit a key to see
amazing effects in 512 colours.
DEM.62C What the Butler Saw by TCC. A short animated film of a maid
undressing.
DEM.64C Animation disk using Animatic by Soft Bits and Fast Basic. Several
animated demos are included on this disk. All demos will run on a 520ST
except Neodistortion which requires 1 Meg. It allows you to load in and
manipulate .NEO files.
DEM.71C 42 Crew demo - Similar to the TEX demos. The Rob Hubbard digi demo
by TEX. Brilliant music and graphic effects. Amiga Juggler on the ST by
Trivision - This is a classic demo for everyone's collection.
DEM.77C The BaPAUG demo from the Bournemouth and Poole Atari User Group.
Demo - An animated sprite of a man walking. Five animated demos created
using Cyber Paint - Newton's Cradle, Car, Dino4, Mickey and Tesla. Single
sided.
DEM.79C Cyber Paint animations. Three short 'films' by John Blakely -
Assault and Battery, Bob-Blob and Raisins. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.80C Cyber Paint animations - Sinister, Trumpet2 and Visitor. Needs 1
Meg.
DEM.86C The Gigabyte demo by the Gigabyte Crew. This demo runs at 60Hz. If
you are using a TV please delete the Auto folder. A colourful demo with a
great soundtrack and a number of Spectrum 512 pics.
DEM.89C The Lost Boys Power Demo. Featuring five graphic screens and
eighteen sound tracks from ST games. A section of this demo is devoted to
games cheats. A classic from TLB.
DEM.90C The Megabang demo from The Lost Boys. On screen animation and
special effects trick the eye into visualising a 3D effect.
DEM.103 The Globe. Needs 1 Meg. Brilliant demo of the earth spinning. Takes
over 4 mins to load data. Also included is demo version of Microdeal's
Tanglewood. 4 Fractals demos. Gremlin Graphics demo. Desktop music files.
Shanghai demo (playable). Sprite Construction Set Demo - No user
interaction.
DEM.108C Spinning Dolls. One Meg memory needed. This is one of the best
graphics demos on the ST. Various demos by "Tex". These demos are in a class
of their own. Also included are instructions on how to make your own demos.
DEM.113C The AAUG demo - Another animation by Bob Chewter. For the
uninformed, the Association of Atari User Groups is an organisation set up
by 8-bit and ST users to represent their respective interests within the
computing industry. Grusel - An interesting animation set in a Graveyard!
Oids - Playable demo of the game from Mirrorsoft. Also includes a Tom and
Jerry cartoon by Jamie Cansdale.
DEM.120 An ST systems diagnostics checker. Accent - Load in text file and
print it out to screen or printer using various accents! Music files 633,
Douyou, Foottap, Good, Riders - All run under interrupt. Triple X Demo. A
collection of scrolling demos which are similar but superior to TEX. Nebulus
- The demo of the game. Playable but only with one life. Star Ray - The
demo of the game by Steve Bak. Gameplay on one level.
DEM.123C Cyber Paint animations - Amiba, Rubernek, Saucerb and Tesla. Cyber
Paint animations - Behind3d, Bouncer, Freebee, Globe and Outpost.
DEM.134C 3D Mapping with CAD-3D. A cross section landscape created using
CAD-3D and rotated on screen. Not STE.
DEM.150C The Amazing Cracking Conspiracy Demo III. Music and pictures.Music
plays via monitor and Midi (if attached). Space Ace demo by the Glasgow
Computer Centre. Animated cartoon with digi-sound.
DEM.161C Christmas Demo by the Norwich Atari User Group. An excellent
graphic animation centering on Christmas in a small town of about 100 years
ago. Also features a nice seasonal soundtrack.
DEM.163C Spectrum 512 animation. An abstract 3D mathematical animation in
512 colours. Runs at 60hz so is not suitable for many TV sets. Spectrum 512
animation. A 3D cube with a clown and a girl on two faces and a lion on
three. The top of the cube opens and closes with a perfectly animated
lion's head on it. Runs at 60Hz so is not suitable for many TV sets.
DEM.166C The Atari World Demo by the Norwich Atari User Group. The familiar
spinning globe logo of the BBC appears in an Atari monitor. Various other
animations run alongside this. NOT STE
DEM.167C Juggling Lamps by John Lasseter using the Imagic Image Processing
System. It featues two digitised table lamps, one of which is bouncing on a
ball. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.174C Cyber Paint animations by Harry Warren - The Hungry Bin and Charlie
Brown. Needs 1 Meg memory.
DEM.176C The Wave Demo - An incredible animation of waves rippling through a
chequered pattern. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.178C The Junk Demo by The Care Bears. Stunning 3D graphic effects with a
nice boring soundtrack! Bomb the Bass - Another sound demo.
DEM.179C The Runaway Cat. Sound and animation synchronised into a mini-film
using AVS. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.180C A digitised animation of a girl shaking her enormous assets about.
DEM.183C Voyage of the Enterprise - A brilliant animation featuring the
Starship Enterprise, a Space Satellite and the Space Shuttle. Needs 1 Meg of
memory. The Ray Tracy Demo - An excellent animation created using a
technique called ray tracing. Needs 1 Meg of memory. 42Crew Demo - Two tunes
and nice graphics. Archipelagos - The demo of the Logotron game. Limited
gameplay.
DEM.191C The Mega Demo by the Megacrew. Good graphics and sound. Many
special effects can be accessed by pressing various keys. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.192 The DIY Demo Kit by Nicholas Ekins-Daukes. Use this disk to create
your own demos. The demo simply displays a picture with scrolling text. You
can of course choose your own picture and text.
DEM.216C Raisins 2 - A later version of Raisins on DEM.79C. This version has
the same animation but features a sampled soundtrack. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.217C The Omega Demo (by Omega!). It starts off by displaying a boring
title screen and a short scrolling message. Press the reset button. Now the
action begins! A digitised face yells at you and the bombs appear. Sit back
and watch. Features 64 different pieces of music from various ST games, 6
graphic demos and a game. Needs 1 Meg memory.
DEM.218C The Cuddly Demos by The Carebears. Features twelve sub-demos. Enter
a new demo behind each of the twelve different doors. Not STE.
DEM.220C Whattaheck Demo by The Care Bears. Another blockbuster by TCB from
Sweden. Arrow keys alter the speed and wave pattern for the menu screen or
to go to any one of the thirteen different demos. Contributions from top
demo crews. Not STE.
DEM.222C The Spheres Show by MUG UK. A 3D example of Ray Tracing. Speed and
background music can be changed by pressing various keys.
DEM.224C The SAS Demo (by SAS). The World's first underwater scroller!
Features a number of tunes and four graphic screens.
DEM.238C Demoing - Music and scrolling text. Animated Turbine by Timothy
Early using Cyber Paint. Engine showing moving parts by F Rawasi using
Sprite Designer from Eidersoft.
DEM.250C DOCIII - Control the waveform patterns. Scroller - An impressive 3D
demo of barrel type effects. Wave Scoller - Wobbly text moving in a sine
wave. Music - Six music files along with a player program.
DEM.265C Yak's picshow. Animated digitised pics of the inimitable Jeff
Minter at the 1989 Atari User Show. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.271C Cyber animations - The Dream and Spike. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.272C Cyber animations - Flint, Golf, Robo Walk. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.299C The Black Cats Demo by Doctor Prof & Others. This is another intros
compilation. Press Space after the loading screen to load in your choice of
various intros.
DEM.305C Aenegmatica Demo No 1 - Released at the 1989 Atari Dusseldorf Fair.
Press F1 to F3 for amazing sub-demos.
DEM.3O6C The Black Cats disk number two. Another disk full of intros by
cracking crews. Some great screens and music. Press Space to exit demo.
DEM.309C Constellations disk number two. More of the same. This time there
are three demos on disk. Not STE.
DEM.310C Zapp Games Demo No 3. A small jet plane takes off and takes you
onto the main screen with scrolling text. Pressing F1 thru F10 plays
various tunes.
DEM.316C The Fighter Demo by Sewer Software - An animation of four warriors
fighting. The Puffy's Saga Demo by Sewer Software - A strange collection of
sound samples. The Twist Demo by Ouch - A 3D demo of scrolling text being
twisted and turned.
DEM.317C Merlin's Spellbook Demo - Spellbook opens and closes to allow you
to read text in it. You can make your own demos. The Bust Demo - Nice 3D
effect with a skeleton smoking a cigar! The Pipeline Demo by Merlin -
Scrolling text and not much else. Tower of Babel - Playable demo of the
Microprose game. No Border - A graphic demo featuring no borders on screen.
You can create scrolling message.
DEM.318C & DEM.319C The Delirious Demo by The Alliance. Twenty demos on this
double disk set. Most demos run on a 520 but some need 1 Meg.
DEM.320C The Magic Eye Demo by Chris Lloyd. Runs for over 20 minutes and
features numerous colourful graphic displays along with four different
digitised soundtracks.
DEM.326C This disks have different raytracing demos created using GFA
Raytrace. All demos use a 60Hz program so they might not work on some TVs.
Needs 1 Meg of memory.
DEM.327C This disks have different raytracing demos created using GFA
Raytrace. All demos use a 60Hz program so they might not work on some TVs.
Needs 1 Meg of memory.
DEM.329C The Animatic Animation demo. Load various demos from disk or make
your own. The only thing you cannot do is to save your work. The Mike Coates
compilation disk. Contains various utilities and games. Compak 3 - A file
compression program. Dog Star - A Text Adventure. Not STE. Hilo - The TV
card game. Runs on half Meg on TOS v1.4 and below, needs 1 Meg on the STE.
The Small Picture Show - Shows various pictures using a new picture
compression technique. Snake Snack - A Grid Runner type game. Not STE. UGLY
MUG - a digitised picture show of a rotating mug
DEM.330C MUG UK Presents a compilation of various tunes taken from games and
arranged by Wally Beben. Another disk of goodies from MUG UK. This one
contains various intros from various cracking crews like The Union, Delta
Force, Tex, The Replicants, The Bladerunners.
DEM.331C Rippler demo by PCM. An animated spinning star and a weird
background. Another colourful demo from PCM. This time it's Jelly Beans,
spinning Balls and a bouncing and spinning ATARI logo. The Demon Demo from
the Dynamic Duo. This excellent demo has seven sub-demos in one, plus a
Pacman game. Use the arrow keys, Return and the Spacebar. 1 Meg memory.
DEM.332C MUG UK Speccy show - Various screen shots from games on the ZX
Spectrum and various tunes from the game Platoon. The Transylvania Demo by
The Lost Boys. A heavy metal music demo by Iron Maiden, complete with the
usual scrolling message.
DEM.344C The V8 Crew Music Demo. 99 pieces of music taken from various
games.
DEM.346C The Finger Bobs New Year Demo. Consists of 4 sub-demos. The best
yet from The Fingerbobs.
DEM.349C The Mega Strange Demo by The Cool Crew. Press keys 1 to 4 for
pictures, 5 to 7 for music and 8 for a slide show.
DEM.351C The Space Probe Demo using Cyber Studio. Shows a planet's surface
with various space probes approaching it. Excellent animation. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.356C The Propulse Demo. Lasts for approximately ten minutes. Some of the
visual effects are really good. The soundtrack is from The Entertainer.
Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.357C The So Watt Demo by The Care Bears. Consists of 17 sub-demos.
Contributions from the top demo writers. Select your choice of demo using
the cursor keys and press SPACE to enter/exit demos.
DEM.358C Swedish New Year Demo II (1989/1990). The followup to the Swedish
New Year Demo on DEM.202C. Created by The Care Bears, Omega and Sync.
Consists of six sub demos (on F1-F6).
DEM.359C The Synthetic Visions by The Art Machine. Five sub-demos, one of
which leads to a game! Space starts main demo then use the left and right
arrow keys to select the demos and Space to load them.
DEM.367C The Interkey Rap Demo by Sundox. Twenty seven keys with different
samples on them.
DEM.375C Space Ace - The demo of the game from Readysoft. Features TRUE
animated cartoon graphics and sampled speech.
DEM.377C The Fantasy Show by The Intruder. Starts up as a demo with
scrolling text, then exits to a Spectrum 512 slideshow.
DEM.385C Replay Professional Demo by Electronic Images & Radical Systemz.
Brings the HMV Logo right up to date! Try pressing the Keys F1/F5. Top
quality sound and graphics. Spectrum 512 Demo. The screen is divided into
four small Atari monitors, each one displaying a different animation. Runs
at 60Hz,so it is unsuitable for some TVs.
DEM.390 GFA. Artist Animation created using the GFA Artist animation
program. A short "film" which runs for several minutes. Cyber Paint
animations Raical - An animation from the Amiga. Unicycle - unicycle
juggling a ball. World - Spinning globe.
DEM.396C The Soundtracker Replay Demo. Load 1 of 6 soundtracks and play them
via Monitor/TV or Midi. Use mouse to load and vary the speed of play back.
DEM.398C Tease Me - Humorous cartoon done using Ani-ST on UTL.181C. Showing
two young ladies taking their clothes off. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.412C A wierd mix. The first demo is a game intro by The Overlanders. Two
other demos are available from the menu. Is there an Amstrad emulator hidden
on this disk? Not STE.
DEM.413C ST Connexions Sound Demo. Features nine Amiga soundtracker files,
each sampled at 28khz. You can load in any soundtracker file by pressing
F10.
DEM.414C The Dragon's Lair Demo by The Bats Crew. An animated demo created
from the laser disk game! Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.415C The Ultimate Demo by The Dynamic Duo. Press Space to start. Use the
arrow keys to select from 8 game tunes and 6 sub demos. Needs 1 Meg. Not
STE.
DEM.416C Compilations 4 by The Black Cats. A collection of 20 intros by
hacking crews.
DEM.419C Special Effects by PcM - A musical slideshow created using STOS.
Includes full instructions and a utility to convert your pictures into the
correct format. NOT STE.
DEM.421C Pearl Animation - An animated sequence of ray-traced pictures
created using Pearl on ART.10C. Boot up with this disk and double-click
CYBER1.RUN to load. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.426C The STE Demo. Excellent graphic and sonic demo showing the extra
capabilities built into the STE. This demo was the first to be released on
the STE and came out at the beginning of 1990. STE ONLY.
DEM.433C Zoetrope - Three animation sequences done in Zoetrope on the Amiga.
Files are Lilguy, Shdwsprk (1 Meg) and Zoecircl. Converted to the ST by Bob
Chewter. Aquademo - A playable demo of the game Aquanaut. Two animations
created with Aegis Animator on the Amiga. Marilyn - Animation of Marilyn
Monroe. Lips and eyes move in sychronisation. Clown - a clown juggling a
number of skittles. Needs 1 Meg on the STE.
DEM.434C The Big STOS Demo by Captain Zogg and The Skunk. Features a title
screen in 44 colours, five sub-demos (press 1-5 to access these) and several
different pieces of music and a VERY fast scroller.
DEM.438C Flame Of Finland Demo Disk 45. A compilation of various demos.
Includes ATG, NASA, Sevenup, Snake, XXX and The Omega Demo which only starts
when you try to reset your ST!
DEM.441C The No-Name Demo by the Hitchhiker. Press keys A - J to access
various screens by Rowan Smith. Press Z key to get a short BATMAN animation.
Needs 1 Meg on the STE.
DEM.443C Cyber Paint animations. Chick 88 - A chicken running around the
screen. Cola-Wars - A take off of the Star Wars theme.
DEM.444C Cyber Paint animations. 520-Spin - An Atari 520ST spinning in mid
air. Cyberider - A motor bike rider in the 21st century. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.447C Music Demos 1 & 2 by The Slaytanic Cult. Choose from a selection of
9 Quartet tunes on the first demo or from 6 on the second. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.449C The Monarch Demo - It shows a small bird flying across the screen
of the Oregon landscape then Mt St Helens erupts! It concludes with sampled
music from The New World symphony.
DEM.456C Sewer Software Demo Compilation 2 - A collection of eight classic
demos compressed onto one double sided disk. The demos are Cube, Popcorn,
SCC Demo 1, Tex Demos 1, 2, 3 and XXX International.
DEM.460C The Sewer Software Demo Compilation No 1 - A compilation of 7
demos. They are Colour Shock, Doc II, Full Screen, Puffy's Saga, Starwars
Rap and Wave Scroller. Not STE.
DEM.466C TNT Demo No 5. Created over Christmas/New Year 1987. This is the
predecessor to TNT Lovespy. Also on disk is a German scrolling demo. You
get to shoot up over 100 Amigas at the end!
DEM.469C The Defcon One Demo by The Watchmen. Press SPACE when the drive
light goes out and watch the Coke Can spin! Goes into a sound and graphic
demo. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.470C 3D Scroller by Tony Barker. Bouncing balls, 3D scrolling, stereo
sound and a multitude of colours. Needs 1 Meg memory. STE ONLY.
DEM.471C Fantasia by Tony Barker - shows hardware scrolling manipulating
solid 3D sprites. Same stereo soundtrack as DEM.470C! Press SPACE to take
control of the scrolling from keyboard or mouse. Some really smart animation
can be seen. Needs 1 Meg memory but will not run on machines with more than
1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.472C Boing_STE by Tony Barker. Demonstrates the power of the blitter
moving graphics on the STE. A large ball bounces inside a box. Colours cycle
continuously on the ball. Once again there's superb stereo sampled sound
(different tune this time!). Needs 1 Meg memory. STE ONLY.
DEM.473C Jungle by Orou Mama & Herve Dudognan. An animated demo which
features a scene from the jungle. Several hundred colours are on screen at
once. A sampled stereo soundtrack of tribal drums and jungle noises
accompanies the animation. Well produced demo. Perhaps the best STE demo so
far. STE ONLY.
DEM.474C Stereo Samples. Eight stereo samples and a digi picture. Listen to
thunder, the tardis, a toad, a guitar, a panflute, an F18 aircraft, laughter
of a kookaburra. 1 Meg memory. STE ONLY.
DEM.475C Movie_STE by Tony Barker. Shows a video-type trailer promoting the
STE. Demonstrates the blitter and the new sound chip. STE ONLY.
DEM.476C Mini Run Demo by Tobias Richter on the Amiga. Converted to the ST
by Radical Systemz. A fast action car chase on the highway. The screen area
has been reduced to fit it into a 520!
DEM.477C The Run Demo. As DEM.476C but at full screen size. All 84 frames
ported across. Converted using DPaint ST. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.478C Mega Run Demo. The same as DEM.477C but this time it's converted
using Cyber Paint. Needs 2 Meg memory.
DEM.483C These animations were done on Aegis Animator on the Amiga.
Micromagic - Four animated figures move across the screen followed by some
wire framed animation. Truckin - An animated sequence of a truck
loading/unloading various types of cars & moving around the screen. Needs 1
Meg on the STE. Two demos by Bob Chewter using Ani-ST. 2Lamps - Two lamps
juggling a ball. Not the same as DEM.43C. Steelhit - A cartoon animation of
a character called Steel, tackling a couple of crooks.
DEM.493C Walker I by Radical Systemz - Conversion of the demo by
Imaginetics from the Amiga. Includes top quality sound effects. Features an
enormous AT-AT from Star Wars walking in front of an Amiga. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.514C ULM New Year Demo - Features six sub demos with excellent sound
and graphics. Press Space to move from one demo to the next.
DEM.515C Galtan 6 Demo - Fly along a graphically excellent landscape
steering your space craft into any one of five docking bays. Each docking
bay is a demo. Excellent sound and graphics throughout. NOT STE.
DEM.516C XTC Demo by The Alliance - The first screen looks corrupt on the
STE but everything else is OK. You must wait 20 seconds to leave the first
screen. Use the arrow keys select from 14 sub demos.
DEM.519C Zodian Slideshow by The Ghostbusters - A well presented musical
slideshow of science fiction pictures created in Spectrum 512.
DEM.520C The TEC Demo by V8. A collection of eight superb sub demos by TEC
of V8 and others.
DEM.542C TNM Demo Disk 1. A demo compilation containing the SAS Demo, Power
Demo, Level 16 Full Screen, XXX International, LSD/LCD Demos, TNM Twist,
Twist by Ouch, Flotsan by Ouch, Ronnie by Ouch, Snake Demo, Alliance Demo,
Axel's Globe Demo, Magnum Demo, TST Final Demo and Sync Demo 2.
DEM.545C Psychadelic House II by PeeWee of The Overlanders. This followup
demo features a mix of Acid House music. STE ONLY.
DEM.546C Walker II Demo by Radical Systemz. A slightly cut down conversion
of an original Amiga demo by Imaginetics. See a helicopter hover over
Chicago and move in for the attack on the AT-AT from Walker I.
DEM.547C Mega Walker II Demo by Radical Systemz. As DEM.546C except that
this is the full version and needs 2 Meg!
DEM.550 TCB Tracker - A promotional demo created with the 4 channel sample
sequencer currently being marketed by MPH. Cylon14c - animated cartoon of
spacecraft. Traxdemo - demo version of music player.
DEM.554C Thalion Music Demo - This demo is in three parts. Part one has 20
different pieces of music from ST games. Part two has eight pieces of music
from Commodore 64 games. Part three has five sampled tunes. Needs 1 Meg.
Axel Demo - A spiralling scroll text in several colours. Bballs - Watch 144
sprites on screen and vary their patterns with the function keys. Exhaust.-
A colourful sound and graphic demo. Mforce - The first demo from Magnum
Force. PP_Music - Pompey Pirates Mega Music Demo. Goes back to Desktop after
loading, move the mouse to enter the demo! Contains twenty-six different
tunes from ST games. Wizard - Colourful sound and graphic demo with several
special effects, including countless tunes from ST games.
DEM.561C MPH Phenomen Demo - A music demo created using TCB Tracker. Both ST
and STE versions are on the same disk. Great music.
DEM.562C MPH Spread Demo - Created with the TCB Tracker. Both ST and STE
versions are on the same disk.
DEM.567C Hemeroids Demo - Amiga Soundtracker modules and a player with intro
from the Hemeroids. Modules are Jas, Alpha, Sanxion, EG, Oswald, Aces,
Noname, Scores, FYC, Surprise, Aker, Rev, Space and Gold.
DEM.568C Deep Space - A Spectrum 512 animation. Shows Jupiter revolving
around one of it's moons. Runs at 60Hz (so unsuitable for some TVs). Select
'Use Script File' from the player program then load Movie.Run. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.569C The Charts by Next - Loads up and presents you with a choice of 7
topics. Each one shows a different top five, eg; games, demos etc.
DEM.570C The V8 Music System 2 - The followup to DEM.344C. This one is even
bigger than the last with 250 pieces of music!
DEM.574C Life's A Bitch by The "New" Lost Boys. Use the cursor keys and the
Space bar to select from 5 brilliant demo screens with excellent music.
single sided.
DEM.580C Cola Wars - An AVS version of the animation on DEM.443C. Features
sound along with the animation. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.583C Amiga Joke by An Cool - An Amiga 2000 appears with laughing in the
background and then goes onto a screen with some samples music. Single
sided.
DEM.585C Audio VisuaL Demo by Kevin Wright. The Audio demo is a very well
done picture with the choice of 6 Quartet tunes to listen to. The Visual is
a collection of Tny pictures (many seen before).
DEM.586C Bushwackers Party Demo - Seven great sub demos. Press Space to exit
the intros then select your choice of demo from the menu using the mouse.
DEM.588C DPaint animations created on the Amiga. ST conversion by Bob
Chewter. Files are MR_Blob, EA_Fly, Rub_Out, Scene10, Reliant1 and
Reliant2. Player program on disk. Press 4 to start/stop.
DEM.590C ACO Demo No 1. An amazing demo from a new Scottish crew. Features
eight sub demos.
DEM.592C The Decade Demo by Inner Circle - Features 14 sub demos. Move using
the arrow keys. Each door is the entrance to a different demo. Enter/Exit
sub demos using Space. Some bad language in this demo.
DEM.594C Hackbear's Demo Compilation No 2. LCD, Big Demo, Amiga Demo -
Classics from the legendary TEX. Knuckle Buster - An early demo by TNT.
There are two hidden screens but they don't work on the STE.
DEM.598C Wrath Of The Demon - The demo of the game from Readysoft. A change
from Space Ace and Dragon's Lair. Although technically a product demo, this
one's a classic.
DEM.606C STE Demos. BF - Bananfisk Demo by Automation. Good use of
colours, scrolling and stereo sound. DTPCDM.02 - Desktop Center Demo -
colour bars and digitised sound. Sunny - Multi directional parallax
scrolling with digi sound. Good 3D effect. WD_Sines - Wierd Sines Demo.
Features 100 sine tables, sampled sounds and 256 colours on screen. YO_STE
- sampled stereo sound and some graphics on a 3D background. STE ONLY.
DEM.607C Presentation - Stereo sound and graphics in 4096 colours promoting
the STE by Atari France. There are three sub-demos. Press Space to advance
to the next sub-demo. STE ONLY.
DEM.609C Slaytanic Cult Demo 3 - A couple of graphic screens followed by a
choice of two Quartet tunes to listen to. Slaytanic Cult Demo 4 - Another
great demo comprising of 6 excellent Quartet tunes with a couple of Turtles
on the loading screen.
DEM.620C Cyber Punk Demo. Animation and sound. Watch the robot blast you.
Similar to Cyberscape on DEM.35C. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.625C Asswipe Demo - A rather distasteful digi sound demo for those of
you with a warped sense of humour. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.631C Nitrowave Demo by NAOS. Written for the GEN 4 demo competition.
Press F1, F2 and F3 to enter the sub-demos. Top quality graphics and
animation (music by Mad Max).
DEM.634C & DEM.635C Skid Row Demo by The (Real) Alliance. A two disk set.
Features countless sub-demos (and I mean countless!). Press Space to exit
the intro screen and use the arrow keys to move through the maze and enter
the sub-demos. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.636C The Ultimate GFA Demo by The Overlanders. Written entirely in GFA
Basic, this demo contains twelve sub-demos and puts many machine code demos
to shame. Will not run on machines with more than 1 Meg memory.
DEM.644C The Unknown Demo by Shek Cheung. A collection of nine different
demos. The music and graphics were ported across from the Amiga. Space
moves you from one demo to the next.
DEM.647C The Bigeye Demo by Chris Lloyd. The followup to the Magic Eye Demo
on DEM.320C. Turn down the lights and stare at the centre of the screen.
Complete with digitised sound. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.652C Aciid Burn II (Preview) - a bit of clever screen manipulation. 3D
Scroller -demos by An Cool of TCB. The Headbangers Demo by Ram - Killer.
Displays a colourful screen and a choice of one of over forty digitised
heads (many of Spitting Image fame).
DEM.655C The Light Show by Richard Glass. A disk which generates random
patterns which pulsate in time to the digitised music.
DEM.657C Christmas - A selection of ten Christmas tunes to choose from.
Fireworks - A colourful fireworks display which exits to a graphic demo. Two
top quality demos by Richard Glass. Ghetto Blaster - A strange one here!
Load up sound samples to replay on the Ghetto Blaster and pictures to view
on the miniature TV set!
DEM.658C Stealth & Daftop - Two Deluxe Paint animations by Bob Chewter.
Stealth was converted from the Amiga and Daftop was converted from the Ani-
ST animation on DEM.43C. Floppyshop Demo No 3 by Harry Warren. A rather
humorous cartoon promoting Floppyshop. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.659C & DEM.660C The European Demos by The Overlanders. Guide your hero
around this mega demo using cursor keys or joystick. This demo comes on two
disks and is set to become a classic.
DEM.661C The Yo Demo by The Black Cats. This one's a bit unusual in that it
takes the form of a shoot 'em up. As you pass over the entrance to a sub-
demo, press SPACE to enter it. Watch out though, if you lose your lives
you're back to start again.
DEM.662C Syntax Terror by Delta Force. Over twenty sub demos here. All are
of an amazingly high quality. Includes two games and guest appearances by
TEX, TLB, TCB, Level 16 etc. Incredible! Not TOS 2 upwards.
DEM.664C The Overdrive Demo by Phalanx. Guide your spacecraft using cursor
keys or joystick through sixteen great sub demos.
DEM.666C Into The Trashcan. A very clever demo written in STOS. Guide Maggie
The Maggot around the screen and enter the numerous sub-demos. Not TOS v1.4
or above.
DEM.667C The Zuul Demo by Gen 4. A collection of small demos. Press SPACE
when you want to advance to the next demo.
DEM.668C The Fish 'N Chips Demo by Sewer Software. A collection of twelve
sub demos. I wouldn't like to be the fisherman! Get this demo and you'll
know what I mean.
DEM.669C April 1st Demo by The Overlamers! A mickey taking demo based around
the Delirious Demo 2 by The Overlanders. This disk must be taken with a
pinch of salt! No, you don't have a duff copy, that's what it's meant to do!
DEM.676C The Unreliable Demo by Lost K. Includes nine sub demos.
DEM.677C The Defcon Demo by Cybernetics. A lengthy sample and some
interesting screen effects. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.678C The Hoby One Demo by The Voyagers. Features ten rather impressive
sub demos, one of which is for the STE only.
DEM.679C The Trans-Beauce Party Demo by The Bushwackers. Seven well produced
sub demos,some of which use the entire screen i.e. use no borders. Single
sided.
DEM.680C The Isen Demo by Thomas Crown. Superb animated raytraced graphics.
Along similar lines but far superior to the Shiny Bubbles Demo on DEM.11C.
Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.687C The STOS Blipp Demo by Escape. A collection of six sub demos which
are all written in STOS Basic (source code on disk!). Your ST has not
bombed,it's all part of the demo!
DEM.695C The Delirious Demo 3 by The Overlanders. Explore a fantasy world
in 32768 colours with stereo background music running at 25Mhz! There are
four or five sub demos. Some feature parallax scrolling and others are
highly amusing. Needs 1 Meg. NOT TOS 2 upwards. STE ONLY.
DEM.706C The Slaytanic Cult's Demos 5 & 6. Demo 5 features 10 pieces of
Quartet music and a title screen. Demo 6 has 8 pieces of Quartet music and a
title screen. Also on disk is the Powerbass Demo which lasts for over ten
minutes and three single tune Quartet demos. All music is original work by
The Slaytanic Cult.
DEM.707C Virtually Real Preview by Radical Systemz. A short preview of a 3D
moving landscape. You need 3D glasses to view this one. Alternatively you
can use red and blue sweet papers! Needs 1 Meg. Deluxe Paint Animations. Two
more animations converted from the Amiga by Bob Chewter. Files are 4Cyl and
Adspec.
DEM.711C Deluxe Paint Animations. Another animation converted from the Amiga
by Bob Chewter. This one is Bug4d. Deluxe Paint Animations. Two more
animations converted from the Amiga by Bob Chewter. Files are Dribbler and
Plane2.
DEM.714C The Christmas 1987 Demo by The A.C.E. St Louis Midi Sig. A musical
slideshow featuring 8 pictures with accompanying music. The music is very
well done and can be played via Midi or monitor. The Christmas 1989 Demo by
The A.C.E. St Louis Midi Sig. A musical slideshow featuring 8 pictures with
accompanying music. The music is very well done and can be played via Midi
or monitor.
DEM.715C AGFA Demo by MUG UK - A small but clever demo featuring ten
different pieces of music and sprites animated in time to the music. Lion
Demo - An animation of the famous lion from MGM trailers. Scramble - Music
and sound effects from game Super Scramble. Universal Pictures - Solid 3D
spacecrafts animated across a starfield. Cyber Paint animations. Files are
Manta_2 , Pt7_Step.
DEM.716C The Electra Demo by Electra. When it boots up it looks like one of
the worst demos you've ever seen. Press the reset button and prepare to be
amazed! As usual, press Space to start. Coloured balls scroll horizontally.
Each ball represents a sub demo. Press Space to enter the sub demos. Some
of the 3D graphics are the best ever seen on the ST. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.719C The JMP 1990 Collection. Seventeen small but impressive (well, most
of them are!) demos created by JMP in 1990. Although these are separate
demos, pressing Space will return you to the Desktop to load the next one.
DEM.720C The Synth Dream Demo by TAV. A collection of six top quality
synthesised tunes.
DEM.724C The ATG Demo No 1 by ATG. Features six colourful sub demos. Needs 1
Meg.
DEM.725C The High Voltage Demos by High Voltage. Three sub demos from a
French demo crew.
DEM.727C The Legend Of The Overlanders. A compilation of 12 small but
impressive demos and intros by the Overlanders. Also on disk is the
complete text scroller from the Union Demo.
DEM.728C The Psychadelic House Acid Mix by PeeWee of The Overlanders. One
of the better Acid Mix disks. This is the predecessor to the STE demo on
DEM.545C. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.734C Demo Compilation 5 from The Overlanders. Comprises of 22 demos and
intros from numerous European demo writers.
DEM.735C The STOS Demo Collection by Storm. An intro followed by six demos
created using STOS Basic. You'll never believe it's STOS!
DEM.740C Alliance - Watch the guillotines. Cebit 90 - A Lost Boys
conversion of the Red Sector Demo on the Amiga. DMA - an intro by DMA.
Enigma - A 3D Shoot Em Up game! FOFT - An impressive intro by Flame of
Finland. 3DSprites - Top class animation from The Lost Boys. TDA - An intro
by TDA. Twist - Interrupt driven music.
DEM.741C Axeldemo - The Globe Demo by Axel of XXX. Press Space to start.
V8_1 - A short demo by V8 featuring animation, music and several depths of
parallax scrolling. Rotating Balls - One of the best animations of its
kind. Similar to Shiny Bubbles on DEM.11C. Requires 1 Meg.
DEM.742C Demo Comilation 6 by The Overlanders. Features 7 demos from the
demo crews of Europe, an Anti-Virus installer and GFA Source Code.
DEM.743C The 91 Demo by Steve Jarrett. Comprises of nine sub-demos all
written by the same author. One of the best British demos this year! Needs 1
Meg.
DEM.744M GFA Girl - An animated cartoon of a dancing girl created using GFA
Basic. Chonticha - A digitised animation created using Imagic.
DEM.745C Three superb Cyber Paint animations. Files are Flint01, Lamp,
Smush.
DEM.749M A collection of three short mono animations created with Imagic.
Animations are Karate Kid, Steve Davies and Yak. Yak needs 1 Meg, the others
run on a 520.
DEM.751C Golden Soundtracker by Sector One - A demo which plays 10 stereo
Soundtracker MODs. Change the tune by pressing the function keys. Good
graphics and animation, fantastic sound. STE ONLY.
DEM.752C Digit Confetis Demo - A superb demo using stereo sound and
digitised voice overs. The graphic display is nice too, with raster bars in
the left and right borders. Needs 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.753C Digisound Demo and STE Videomatique. Digisound - Select a number
of short stereo samples to play from a menu. Videomatique - Load up three
PI1 pictures and watch the STE's hardware scrolling at its best. Source
code in GFA Basic for both programs. Needs 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.754C The Fusion Demo - The title screen is probably the most grotesque
yet! Plays nine different digitised tunes in 4 voices.
DEM.757C The Ouch Demo by Visualiser and Zealot from OUCH - Several small
demos which have to be run from the Desktop. Most of the demos can be
exited by pressing Space.
DEM.758C Digital Concert 1 by Storm - Plays three excellent digitised
tunes. These are followed by a short scrolling text demo. Advance from one
demo to the next by pressing Space.
DEM.760C The Poi Poi Demo by Thomas Crown - Features an introduction
sequence followed by loading music throughout. Based on the famous Raisins
demo but with a different sample. If you only have a 520, you get chip
music instead.
DEM.761C The Electrocution Demo by Sphere - The usual title screen with
music and scrolltext. However, this one has a difference. You can rotate 3D
objects by simple key presses. This demo will not run on machines with more
than 1 Meg of memory.
DEM.773C The Double Doozers Demo by CHAOS of Manchester Smugly - Move your
robot around and press Space to enter each of the seven sub demos. No new
tricks but nicely presented. Press Reset for the reset demo!
DEM.774C Happydaze - An animation by Radical Systemz. Mega Tridi Demo -
Probably the best example of solid 3D animations you're likely to see. Repl
- An intro by the Replicants. ULM - An intro by ULM. Xenex - An intro by
Xenex.
DEM.778C Ghost - A sine wave scroller. Extensive use of colour and no
borders on screen. Alphanumeric keys change the music. Hardsell - Impressive
hardware scrolling on any ST. Monolith - An impressive sound and graphic
demo which claims to have 3 hidden screens. I find one then get returned to
the Desktop. Can you do better? Turbine - An animation of a turbine in 3D.
Ancool - An impressive demo by An Cool of TCB. Won't run on machines with
more than 1 Meg IMA_1 - The first intro coded by IMA. Jaws - An impressive
intro by Level 16 and The Replicants. Sync - Wobbly scrollers, sine wave
scrollers etc. TCB - An impressive 3D intro on a starfield. Tintin - An
intro from V8. Xmas - The Christmas 1990 Demo by The Replicants.
DEM.781C The Avengers Megademo - Gateway to Hexenland. A superb megademo
with a similar main menu to the Mindbomb Demo and the ULM Megademo. Use the
cursor keys to control the 'sexy sorcerer!'. Press Space to enter each of
the 12 sub demos (yes, there's a hidden one) or reset to see the reset demo!
If you're lazy, just sit back and watch the demo autorun! Incredible coding
from a new continental group.
DEM.783C Digi Synth 1 by The Wild Boys - A well presented intro, leading to
a main menu from which you can listen to eight MOD files ported from the
Amiga.
DEM.784C Digi Synth 2 by The Wild Boys - A really clever 3D intro, leading
to a main menu from which you can listen to five MOD files ported from the
Amiga.
DEM.785C Digi Synth 3 by The Wild Boys - Another neat intro, leading to a
main menu from which you can listen to nine MOD files ported from the Amiga.
DEM.786C Digi Synth 4 by The Wild Boys - The intro features a wobbly
scroller and pulsating effects. The main menu lets you select from another
nine MOD files ported from the Amiga.
DEM.787C The Wild Demo by The Wild Boys - An impressive British multi part
demo (a rarity nowadays!). Features eight sub demos. Good music, graphics
and special effects.
DEM.788C Slaytanic Cult STE Demos 1 to 4 - Yet another amazingly incredible
demo from the Slaytanic Cult. All four demos take advantage of the extra
features of the STE. Fantastic stereo sound and hardware scrolling. STE
ONLY.
DEM.789C The Cosmic Demos by The Watchmen - This was to have been a
Megademo but was never completed. There is a loader and seven sub demos.
Exit each demo by pressing the Spacebar. You will get bombs each time you
exit a sub demo but don't worry, you will be able to load the next demo
without problems. The loader goes a bit wierd on an STE, just press Space
to exit it.
DEM.790C The Safe Sex Demo by Harvey Lodder - His best demo to date. Don't
be misled by the title, there is nothing distasteful about this demo. It is
one of the cleverest pieces of work in years, consisting of excerts from
various pop songs in a similar fashion to 'Bionic Santa' and the Barron
Knights' classics of the '70s. Completely harmless and highly amusing.
DEM.792C The Gala Demo by Exel - A well drawn title screen with the
customary scrolltext. Features three sub-demos, the last of which allows
you to listen to three Amiga Soundtracker MODs. Not bad for their first
demo.
DEM.793C The Teaparty Demo by The Double Dutch Crew - A truly amazing Mega
Demo by a new crew. The reset demo starts you off! Press SPACE to enter the
demo proper. The main menu consists of a picture of an ST and some disks.
Depending on which demo you insert into the ST on screen, you get one of 11
sub demos. The reset demo's good fun too. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.794C The TFC Megademo 1 - Loads up with a no border display in 512
colours then proceeds to a main menu from which 7 sub demos can be loaded.
Can you find the hidden demo? Top quality from a new British crew. Source
code in STOS Basic included.
DEM.795C The Enigma Sadness Demo by Axxept from Belgium - Full screen 512
colour accompanying sample and scrolltext. Gives extra colours and better
sound on the STE. An impressive piece of work. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.797C The Better Than Life Demo by ACO and Flair - Takes ages to
decompact when first loaded, so don't give up on it. Features 11 sub demos
by this relatively new Scottish crew. Select the demos from the main menu
using a joystick. Some real clever stuff in this one.
DEM.799C Energy For You by The ST Knights from France - Choose one of 5
soundtracker MODs to listen to by pressing F1 to F5 from the main menu.
Outclasses any sampled sound demo.
DEM.800C The Vegetables Mega Demo - This demo was created by a French Amiga
crew. The graphics are incredible. There are 7 sub demos, one of which
boasts 4096 colours and even gives the Amiga's interlace flicker on sceen!
select from one of three tunes on the main menu.
DEM.803C THE S-Extension Demo by Network from Norway - A fantastic demo
with 10 sub demos. Move from one demo to the next by pressing SPACE. Each
sub demo could rank as a demo in its own right. You even get a stereo
soundtrack if you have an STE!
DEM.806C The Astro Demo by The GM. Two cleverly animated spacemen doing a
bit of a jive! The music is in 3D stereo and is most impressive. You can
alter the treble and bass as well as the animation speed. Overscan on upper
and lower borders. Needs 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.807C The Predator III - Deadlier Than The Male Demo by Bill Croan. A
rather bloodthirsty animation with added sound for 1040 owners! Watch Arnie
Shwarzenegger get his throat cut by a ghoulish female. A cut down version
for 520 owners is also on disk. It even has its own PG certificate!
DEM.808C The Futur Minds GEN 4 Compilation No1 - A compilation of 8 demos
from the French demo competion GEN 4. Contributions from Futur Minds,
Overlanders, Equinox, TEC, ULM and others.
DEM.809C The Mega Fun Demo - A compilation of seven sub-demos by The
Bushwakers, The Firehawks, DMA, Phenix and Futur Minds. Two of the demos
will not run on machines with more than 1 Meg of memory.
DEM.813C DEF_II - A small but impressive demo created by Lem and Sinew for
Gen 4. Supercars Demo by MUG UK - Comprises of the soundtrack from
Supercars and a few screenshots from the game. Volcano - A prehistoric
animation created using Ani-ST (UTL.187). The Hemeroids GEN 4 Demo -
Features three impressive sub demos. Will not run on systems with more than
1 Meg of memory. Not STE.
DEM.816C The VDU Demo by Harvey Lodder - A spoof Government Health Warning
on VDU radiation. Read the health warning, watch the demonstration and see
the effects of radiation. A couple of unorthodox cures are highly
recommended. You'll enjoy it if you are open minded and have a wierd sense
of humour. Harmless fun, nothing distasteful here. NOT TOS 1.62. The Mini
Juggler Demo by Radical Systemz. This is the demo which started it all!
Digitised frame by frame from the mainframe version. A truly amazing demo
which has had to be reduced in size to fit into half Meg of memory!
DEM.821C The Cor Blimey Megademo by Storm - Features 13 excellent sub demos
all written in STOS! Needs a joystick to operate the main menu. Not STE.
DEM.822C The Reanimators Music Demo - Plays eight top quality MOD files
along with animation, scrolltext etc. There's a hidden screen, can you find
it?
DEM.823C Things Not To Do by Electronic Images of Inner Circle - A highly
amusing demo featuring eight things not to do! Superb animation, sound and
graphics. A bit sick but good fun!
DEM.824C The Little Music Demo - Originally done on the Amiga by Sonic
Projects and converted to the ST by Griff of Inner Circle. Features eight
pieces of originally composed tracker music. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.826C GUNSHIP - An incredibly smooth Cyber Paint animation of a
helicopter gunship travelling through mountainous scenery. needs 2 Meg!
DEM.827M Scan One Demo by Pegasus - An impressive collection of digitised
images created by the Colibri hand held scanner and the Hawk CP14. The
images have been compiled into a slideshow with impressive screen effects
using the Imagic Desktop Video software. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.833C Digi Synth 5 by The Wild Boys - The usual intro followed by a main
menu from which you can select 9 MOD files.
DEM.834C Digi Synth 6 by The Wild Boys - An intro followed by a main menu
from which you can select 9 MOD files.
DEM.835C State Of The Art Megademo by The Wild Boys - Another impressive
multi-part demo with several guest screens. Features 11 sub demos in all.
not STE.
DEM.837C The Red Sector Megademo by The Crossbones - A wierd but impressive
four part megademo by a new crew from Europe.
DEM.838C The TBE Stereo Music Demo - Six top quality tunes and pictures
which play in stereo (the tunes , not the pictures!) if you have a Monster
Stereo Cartridge.
DEM.842C The Hibernation Carols Demo by Sewer Software - Exclusively
available from Floppyshop. A selection of ten tunes is available from the
main menu. Each tune loads up with its own seasonal picture. The music in
this demo is the highest quality ever heard on the ST! Even if you don't
order any other Christmas software this year, you simply must have this one.
DEM.846C TRACKER MENU #1 by Swampjuice & V90 - A nice intro followed by the
loading of the Esion Tracker. 7 MOD files on disk to listen to. These are
mostly from games and demos. Won't work on machines with more than 1 Meg,
DEM.847C TRACKER MENU #2 by Swampjuice and V90 - An impressive collection of
4 MOD files, each with accompanying picture.
DEM.848C SUMMONING OF THE SPAWN by Digital Justice - Guide your spacecraft
through countless screens. Some turnings lead to the next screen, others
lead to the next demo. It is impossible to count how many sub-demos there
actually are!
DEM.849C STEREO MASTER DEMO - Although this is intended to promote the
product of the same name, it features superb sound and graphics (mostly by
Radical Systemz).
DEM.850C MUSIC FOR THE MASSES VOL 4 by NPG - A collection of 7 of the latest
tunes fvom the Amiga along with an easy to use player program.
DEM.851C THE DIGITAL JUSTICE DEMO by Digital Justice - Comprises of 6 sub-
demos. Demos 4 & 5 won't run on TOS 1.4 or higher.
DEM.853C ECHO's MUSIC Disk 2 - A collection of 9 tunes composed by Echo
using Microdeal's Quartet. These are saved as executable files and each one
loads up with an impressive picture. Highly recommended.
DEM.854C NEW STREAM by The Cybernetics - This is some demo! Features six
sub-demos including one for the STE only. An impressive collection which
even features a few new tricks. Highly recommended.
DEM.855C THE AFTERMATH DEMO by The Slaytanic Cult - An impressive picture
in countless colours which are only possible on an STE. The scene depicts
rows of crucifixes so it's a bit tasteless. The stereo sound is superb.
Press Return to enter the demo and Space to exit. You get a humorous stereo
sample on exit! Needs 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.856C THE MAD DEMO by Douglas Little - Features a short but impressive
piece of animation and a lengthy stereo sound sample played through the DMA
port. Needs 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.857C THE CONFUSION DEMO by Douglas Little - Incredible stereo DMA sound
with an oscilloscope on screen showing the wave forms in real time. Needs 1
Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.858C DIGI SYNTH 7 by The Wild Boys - An impressive intro leading to the
usual menu from which 9 MODs can be selected.
DEM.861C & DEM.862C THE ATG MEGADEMO - A 2 disk set. Features 11 sub-demos
(including a reset demo). All demos are of a remarkably high standard. Use
the cursor keys to choose the required demo and Space to load it. When the
background on the loading screen turns purple, press Space again to enter
the demo. This is the second (and regrettably the last) demo from ATG and it
took about six months to write.
DEM.863C THE VODKA DEMO by Equinox - Fly your spacecraft around the
landscape. Each demo is named so you fire at the name to enter the demo. I
found 10 sub demos but you may find more! STE ONLY.
DEM.864C THE REFLEX DEMO by Opposition - Features 3 sub-demos. The first
allows you to select from 8 tunes, the second features a massive barrel
scroller and the third is a tribute to Mad Max which features 10 tunes by
the living legend!
DEM.866C THE ALF III DEMO by Next - Yet another superb megademo. This one
has 8 sub demos, several of which are cloned from the Amiga. The main menu
may look familiar! Contains bad language, do not order if you are likely to
be offended. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.867C THE YEAR AFTER by The German Alliance - Boots up with an Amiga
Workbench. Click the Trashcan for fun, double click the disk drive icon to
open a window. The window reveals 8 icons, each one being a sub demo. A top
quality demo with several added gimmicks.
DEM.868C RETINAL BURN by The Asylum - A nine part mega demo written in STOS.
The effects achieved make this one of the best STOS demos. One of the demos
even formats your disks and installs one of half a dozen custom bootsectors
onto it!
DEM.869C THE GNOOGUNOGUMBAR DEMO by The Radioactive Hedgehogs - An
impressive 11 part mega demo written in STOS. Once again, you'd never know
it was written in STOS! Don't access the squibbly screen until last. You'll
know why if you try to!
DEM.870C AWAKENING OF THE GODS by Kruz - A four part demo by a new crew.
Good music and graphics.
DEM.871C THE DEMO WITH NO NAME by DDT - A three part STOS demo which
features 4 channel soundchip music, wierd samples with pictures to match and
three excellent soundtracker MODs.
DEM.872C SEWER PICTURE DISK 1 by Sewer Hedgehog and Golden Otter - An
impressive collection of 25 beautifully digitised pictures, each with its
own accompanying soundtrack.
DEM.873C GARFIELD & CRY - 2 excellent animations converted from the Amiga.
LASER - An animation of a spacecraft being fired on. Complete with sound
effects. ACF SLIDESHOW 1 - A collection of 14 original pictures by ACF,
complete with accompanying soundtrack.
DEM.878C INSECTS - A Cyber Paint animation of bees, a dragonfly and goodness
knows what else flying around! Needs 1 Meg. HOLE IN ONE - A superb Cyber
Paint animation of a golf ball being hit across the fairway. Need 1 MEG.
DEM.881C THE LASER ST MICRO DEMO by Laser - Another really impressive demo
from the Continent featuring seven sub demos. Highly recommended. THE AUDIO
ARTISTIC DEMO - A collection of 6 originally composed tunes which are
selected using the numeric keys 1-6. Look out for the 'ghostly' animation on
the menu!
DEM.882C SYNTH DREAM II by Eternal Developments - The main feature of the
demo is a menu from which you can select 16 different tunes. There are
several small animations, all with sound, both before and after the main
menu. Highly amusing animations of Mad Max! Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.884C FRENCH NEW YEAR DEMO 1991 by The Thunderbirds - A most
impressive demo with superb sound and graphics. There are six sub-demos,
selected using the function keys.will not run on machines with more than 1
Meg.
DEM.885C SON ET LUMIERE DEMO by Paranoia - This demo features the best
quality music in our collection. You get two or tee pleasant intros, then a
main menu from which you select 11 tunes. Each has been played and sampled
by Paranoia. The docs are in English, French and German and source code is
included in Hisoft Basic. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.887C HARDCORE DANCEFLOOR by The Wild Boys - A collection of 5lengthy and
unusual MODs which can be selected from the main screen. Similar to the Digi
Synth demos.
DEM.888C MUSIC FOR THE MASSES III by NPG - 7 excellent MOD files which are
loaded from a main menu.
DEM.890C THE STUPENDOUS DEMO by The Pixel Twins - Walk through a Dungeon
Master type maze. Each door opens into a separatatdemo. There must be about
a dozen demos but I lost count, or at least I got lost in the maze! Two
demos are STE only and there's even an STE game. Don't enter the STE screens
unless you have an STE or you may crash your machine. Well produced demo.
DEM.891C THE CORPORATION MEGADEMO - A unique 5 part megademo for the STE.
Great graphics and sound (in stereo). Treat your STE to this one! NOT TOS
2.06 upwards. STE ONLY.
DEM.893C & DEM.894C PUNISH YOUR MACHINE by Delta Force - Another truly
amazing European Megademo. There are contributions from all the leading
European demo crews. A total of fifteen demos are included in this two disk
set and one en has several parts to it! Use the up and down arrow keys to
select from the main menu and Space to load. A classic!
DEM.895C & DEM.896C THE CUNNING DEMOS by ACO and Flair - An impressive
collection of around 20 demos written in STOS with contributions from all
the best STOS coders including STORM and The Happening Bz. Drive your car
along a track avoiding obstacles as you go. Press Space as you pass over the
name of a demo to enter it.
DEM.898C THE TRANSBEAUCE DEMO II DISK 1 - This megademo was compiled as
aresult of a coding party organised by The Bushwackers in May 1991. This
disk contains the top twelve entries in the demo contest. You move a ball
around a massive screen. Each time you come into contact with another ball
you enter a a a demo. Upon leaving the demo that ball joins on and after
you've seen three or four demos, you are guiding a caterpiller like object
around. This is undoubtedly the best demo of 1991. This disk runs
independently of disk 2. Press the HELP kor the credits etc.
DEM.899C THE TRANSBEAUCE DEMO II DISK 2 - One the demo has loaded and the
main screen appears, press the HELP key. Wait until a black and white
picture of a miner appears, then press SPACE. You are now in the main menu!
Use the cursor keys to select one of the 15 demos and Space to load. This is
a compilation the best of the rest. In other words, those which could not
fit on disk 1. In my opinion they are of just as high a standard. Highly
recommended. This disk runs independently of disk 1.
DEM.900C THE UNKNOWN COMMAND DEMO by START - A six part demo from a new
French group. Good graphics and plenty of well known music.
DEM.901C THE SPACE DEMO by The Megabusters - Guide your flying, roller
skating turtle around the screen. As usual, each door leads to a different
demo and there are eleven of them in all (including the reset demo). All
demos are well done and the main menu uses no left or right borders.
DEM.902C THE KULTURMELK DEMO by Imagina - A demo from Norway. Some of the
graphics are unusual but the stereo sound is really impressive. Needs 1 Meg.
STE ONLY.
DEM.3071C CYBERPAINT ANIMATIONS - Four excellent animations. The Cobra and
Billcat ones are brilliant! Player on disk. Animations are BILLCAT, COBRA,
FLYNIGHT (1 Meg), SPIKES
DEM.3072C THE PIXEL TWINS XMAS DEMO 1991 - Move Santa from one part of the
room to another using the cursor keys. Press RETURN when standing beside the
presents to enter the sub demos. Try switching on the Xmas tree lights or
having a drink! This demo is nothing spectacular but it is highly amusing.
Recommended for the kids.
DEM.3074C CYBERPAINT ANIMATIONS - Seven more great animations, player on
disk. Eternal, Gears and Scanned are my favourites! Animations are ETERNAL,
FALLWELL, GEARS, NITESURF, RAUL_M, ROBO_RAY, SCANNED.
DEM.3075C ANI-ST ANIMATIONS - Four animations created using Ani-ST on
UTL.187C. Animations are CARMOVIE (1 Meg), HEADROOM, VALENTINE, VOIDSHIP.
DEM.3076C DOT THE STOS COLLECTION by DDT - A collection of 3 demos written
in STOS Basic. The Political Demo is definately the best of the bunch.
Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.3078C REFLEX DEMO (FULL VERSION) by The Opposition - We already have the
preview version of this one on DEM.864C. This version features all the
screens from the original plus 3 new ones.
DEM.3079C THE SUPREME DEMO by Underground TOS - Features 7 sub demos.
Advance from one to another by pressing SPACE. Nothing new in programming
tricks but pleasant to watch with good graphics and impressive sound. Press
UNDO to switch sound on/off.
DEM.3080C MASSIVE ATTACK by Mad Vision - A really good megademo with 7 sub
demos. (Un)fortunately you have to let each demo take its course before
progressing to the next. The 3D solid graphics, 3D maze and music throughout
are very well done.
DEM.3081C OZYMANDIAS SLIDESHOWS by POV - Two slideshows, each with numerous
original pictures. A different MOD file plays alongside each slideshow. The
pictures are a bit unusual and artistically very good. Worth a look. Needs 1
Meg.
DEM.3082C THE SNORK DEMO by The Firehawks - You need to switch off your
machine for about 3 minutes before running this one. Starts off with a
monster pressing the self destruct button. This is followed by a further 6
sub demos. Good sound and graphics but nothing new.
DEM.3083C PANDORA'S BOX by ACO - Written for the 1st Scottish Computer Fair
in Glasgow in December 1991. A collection of eight demos and a game. All
were written in STOS and several feature smooth parallax scrolling and one
has over 30 colours on screen. The game involves tracing your way around the
bends of a wire without actually touching the wire. If that sounds
complicated,give it a go,it is!
DEM.3084C MUSICAL WONDERS DEMO 1991 by Offbeat - This is a really impressive
collection of almost eighty soundchip and digitised tunes, mostly from ST
games. The intro screen features one of the best no border animations
around. This demo is a joy to watch and, (more importantly) to listen to.
DEM.3085C THE TEX SPECTRUM DEMO - A TEX demo from the archives, but it's
worth getting hold of. It features an excellent intro followed by a
slideshow of over 20 Spectrum 512 pictures, mostly converted from the Amiga.
As is usual for such things, you get a Mad Max tune playing throughout.
DEM.3086C SDI - A Cyber Studio animation, complete with sound. It shows the
Space Shuttle launching a satellite equipped with ICBMs. The Russians
accidentally launch a missile at Denver. It is intercepted and destroyed by
an ICBM in mid flight. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.3087C IMAGIC ANIMATIONS - Four stunning animations created with the
Imagic Graphic System. Animations are CONTICHA (1 Meg), DISCO, DRAGON, UHR.
DEM.3127C MUSIC FOR THE MASSES V by NPG - 9 excellent MOD files which are
loaded from a main menu.
DEM.3128C ANIMATIONS - Two Imagic animations and one Cyberpaint animation.
SHUTTLE - Watch the Space Shuttle blast off in this digitised animation.
WANDEL - A skull rotates through space and transforms into a woman's face.
WATCHMAN - Watch the android take a bow!
DEM.3142C PEGASUS by Wizard Wim - Displays a colourful picture of the
fabled flying horse. Experiment by pressing various keys to change the tune
etc. THE DYNAMITE SOUNDE DEMO by Unit Seventeen - An impressive demo of
originally composed stereo sound and colourful graphics. The demo was
created using the Roland S50, Korg M3R, Yamaha TX812, Alesis Midiverb 11,
Boss SE50 and Roland M120 Linemixer. Try pressing the keys F4-F10 for the
oscilloscope and other effects. It plays 8 channel polyphonic sound at
25Khz. Needs 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.3201C THE OVERDOSE DEMO by Armada - A continous demo in 9 parts. Each
sub demo is introduced by an incredible graphic screen which is not unlike
high res on the Amiga (complete with flicker). This is a pleasant demo to
watch with good graphics and sound throughout. The most impressive sub demo
is of a solid 3D space shuttle spinning in mid air. NOT TOS 1.0.
DEM.3202C MY SOCKS ARE WEAPONS by Legacy - This is Legacy's first demo but
it's not to be dismissed. It is a continuous demo rather than a multi-part
demo. Features excellent tracker music created with Audio Master and has
good graphics. Rather a short demo with no new programming tricks but
worthwhile nevertheless.
DEM.3203C DENTRO DEMO by The Hemeroids - A small demo which appears to have
more to it than meets the eye. It just seems to be a vertical scrolltext on
a starfield. If you watch to the end, the greetings display various national
flags as vector graphics. It says you can control it with various keys, I
just can't find them! DISKFLIP by Bill Rehbock - An excellent Cyber Studio
animation with sound. Watch a disk spin through 360 degrees as it wings its
way towards the disk drive. A short demo which is in a class of its own.
FULLPARTS by The Hemeroids - Another small demo which starts with two
pictures and then goes into a full screen display. GEN 4 - A collection of
five small demos created for the GEN 4 demo competition in France.
DEM.3204C THE SATAN MEGADEMO by C.A.T. - Ignore the bombs, your ST has not
crashed, it just the author's warped sense of humour! Move the mouse to
enter the first into and Space to proceed. You will then get a TOS error,
just press R to continue. Now if you can get this far you deserve to see the
demo! Features six sub demos with original soundtracker music. A well
produced demo from France.
DEM.3206C PEEKES & POKES MUSIC DISK 2 - Features 6 pieces of originally
composed music, each with an accompanying picture. The graphics are great
but the music is incredible! Although this demo runs on any ST, you get
fantastic stereo on the STE.
DEM.3207C M DEMO 3 by An Cool of TCB - Starts off with a horrible digitised
intro but it gets better! The soundtrack is originally composed (probably
with TCB Tracker) and is very well done, despite being wierd in places. It
is of course in true stereo. I can't seem to exit the third demo, but then
again perhaps you're not meant to! STE Only.
DEM.3208C THE ULTIMATE MUSAK DEMO Vol 1 by The PHF - The third demo by PHF.
Use the up and down arrows to move up and down the barrel scroll through the
tunes from each musician and the left and right arrows to change the artist.
Features 195 pieces of music from 18 different musicians. Some of the tunes
are from ST games and others are converted from C64 games.
DEM.3210C THE PRELUDE DEMO by The Mega Four - A 10 part demo (including the
reset demo). The demo itself is well written but doesn't really show off any
new tricks. On the digi demo, press the function keys to change the music.
If you press ALT when booting up you get a host of extra programs by The
Mega 4. These include a boot from B program, an executable bootsector maker
and a selection of tracker MODs with a player program.
DEM.3211C THE SYMIC DEMO by Axxis - Rather a slow demo to start with but
once you get into it proper, the main menu allows you to listen to your
selection from 147 tunes from ST games. Move up and down the list using the
cursor keys and press Space to select a tune.
DEM.3212C SEWER SOFTWARE PICTURE DISK 2 by Sewer Hedgehog and Golden Otter.
A coolection of 23 superb digitised pictures, mostly of animals. Each
picture has a tune and scrolltext to go with it. The pictures display best
on pre-STE machines although they will run on the STE.
DEM.3214C THE KIDNEY BEAN DEMO by Zap Creation of The Heavy Killers - This
is the first demo from a new crew. It features 14 sub demos and was coded
completely in GFA Basic. It has good graphics and music throughout, some of
the music is 'borrowed' and some is original. On the main menu a ball falls
continuously and you can guide it using the cursor keys. Press Space when
next to any door and you start from that demo. Each time you press Space you
progress to the next. A pretty respectable first demo.
DEM.3215C THE WORLD IS MY OYSTER by Aura - The first demo from a newish crew
formed by former members of Axxis. A 6 part demo which was created on Friday
13th! All screens are well done and most of the music is 'borrowed' from Mad
Max. Personally I liked the multi coloured bouncing frog best!
DEM.3217C & DEM.3218C THE NTM DEMO by Zuul - This is one of the biggest and
best demos ever seen. Featuring 20 sub demos by almost as many demo crews
from across Europe, this one will take some beating. You fly your futuristic
fighter plane (which looks like a giant shrimp!) across a battlefield
shooting everything in sight. This is a game and you get only three lives!
Lose a life and you continue where you left off, lose all three and you're
back to the beginning! Press Space as you pass over the name of a demo.
Control your fighter using the cursors or a joystick and go as fast or slow
as you like. Change to disk 1 or 2 as denoted by the disk number quoted on
the demo name. Truly amazing in every way with a few new tricks thrown in
too!
DEM.3219C Five great animations converted from the PC. MR NUMO - Watch him
count his steps as he bounces along! SACHIKO - An animation of a Japanese
girl playing the guitar. TEAPOT - Watch the steam puff out in mini teapots!
MERMAID - Watch her hair and tail move in the breeze. SPLAT - A short
animation of a computer screen having some paint thrown at it! Player
programs included on disk.
DEM.3220C X29-2A - An impressive animation of a fighter plane staging a fly
past. Converted from Autodesk Animator on the PC by Martin Packer using
FLICON on ART.3190. This disk autoboots and needs 1 Meg.
DEM.3221C BUZZBEE - One of the best animations I've seen. Watch the fish
swim around the goldfish bowl and out through the glass, round the bowl and
back in, creating a sort of 4D effect! Converted from Autodesk Animator on
the PC by Martin Packer using FLICON on ART.3190. This disk autoboots and
needs 1 Meg.
DEM.3222C Two excellent animations supplied with a player program. MOUSE -
Probably the funniest animation I've ever seen. Watch the mouse take fright
and run for its life! RRHOOD - An impressive animation of a dancing girl
complete with shadows, lighting etc. Both were converted from the PC by
Martin Packer using FLICON on ART.3190C. Both require 1 Meg of memory if you
are running the ANIMTOOL program (medium res only). Half meg owners must run
MINITOOL.TTP and type the name of file to be run.
DEM.3287C, DEM.3288C, DEM.3289C & DEM.3290C THE PHALEON GIGADEMO by Next -
This massive demo collection comes on four double sided disks! It consists
of 33 individual demos, one of which is STE only, and a reset demo. The
collection is compiled by Next but has contributions by almost 30 top
European demo crews. The gigademo begins its life as a Next emulator, and a
pretty impressive looking one too! You are then presented with the first
menu from which you can select a maze, an alternative main menu and a few
other bits and pieces. If you just press Space, this leads you to a screen
which resembles the scenery from Shadow Of The Beast. This is the first main
menu. Move using the cursor keys or joystick. Each of the 17 doors leads to
a demo and Space/Fire enters the demo. At the end of the first menu is a
teleporter. Just walk into it to get to the second menu which contains 10
demos. The 11th door leads to the third menu which contains another 6 demos.
The menus are superbly done and the demos are fairly mixed. They range from
OK to brilliant.
DEM.3291C THE SYNERGY DEMO by EXCEL - A five part demo created entirely
using STOS Basic. Select the demos by using the keys 1 to 5 from the main
menu. Good standard for STOS Basic. Includes full source code on disk.
DEM.3292C THE BUNCH DEMOS by Mungo of Dentrassi - An impressive collection
of 11 demos written in GFA Basic (although you'll never believe it). The
main menu consists of a 7 storey building. Each room leads to a different
demo. Once you've seen all the demos on the appropriate floor, enter the
lift and go to the next floor!
DEM.3293C THE HYPERBLIT DEMO by DML of The Pixel Twins - A superb demo of 3D
vector balls (perhaps the best) which includes a mirrored effect. Superb on
an ordinary ST but even better on the STE with even smoother scrolling. If
you have a 1 Meg STE you even get a stereo soundtrack! Both STFM and STE
versions on disk.
DEM.3295C THE GIGA DANCE DEMO by The Shadow Warriors - This demo consists of
a collection of nine excellent tracker tunes which can be played from the
function keys. Press F10 to load up your own MOD files. There's also a no
flicker, no border reset demo. Graphics and sound (stereo if you have an
STE) are very good on this demo.
DEM.3299C WAVEFORMS (also known as Digi Synth 8) by The Wild Boys - Starts
yp with a great intro featuring solid 3D objects rotating in a 3D starfield.
You can then select 10 excellent MOD files from the main menu. As usual, the
sound quality is brilliant. When the music is playing, the sound bars are
displayed on a background of 3D waveforms, hence the name of the demo.
DEM.3300C PEEKS & POKES MUSIC DISK 1 - An impressive collection of 7 MOD
files with accompanying graphics. All music and graphics are converted from
the Amiga. Very high quality. Stereo sound if you have an STE.
DEM.3302C PEEKS & POKES MUSIC DISK 4 - Every Peeks & Pokes disk seems to be
better than the last! Another 6 MOD files with accompanying graphics. Stereo
sound as usual if you have an STE.
DEM.3304M THE SILVERBALL - An impressive animation of a large 3D ray traced
animated bouncing ball. Very similar in concept to Shiny Bubbles but mono
only. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.3305C HOLLOW - An animation of two 3D solid shaded objects and a 3D fan
rotating freely within a hollow object. Created with CAD-3D Animator.
Double-click HOLLOW.RUN to start the animation. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.3364C & DEM.3365C CODING SO FAR by The Megabusters - A two disk
demo from a French based crew. This demo is different in that the disks may
be used independently or together. The menu is present on both disks so it
does not matter which disk you load first. It requires user interaction, in
that you have to go around the screens entering the mushroom type cottages
to access the demos. The cottages often contain more than one screen and
sometimes have hidden screens. The demo screens themselves have all the
usual graphics effects and multi-coloured full screen scrollers. There is
even a scroller which goes around a maze (viewed from above). The famous
balls that zoom around the screens making patterns, also make a customary
appearance. There are also some games, several of which are hidden. More
data disks are promised as add ons to this demo so it's not all over yet!
Highly recommended.
DEM.3392C ERIC SCHWARTZ'S 'TERMINAL' by Radical Systemz - A welcome return
for Amiga conversion specialists, Radical Systemz. This one features cartoon
graphics and digitised sound effects. Watch the nurse walk by as the
patient's heartbeat stops on the monitor. The only way to describe this
excellent demo is 'short but sweet'! Terminal requires 1 Meg. THE NO COOPER
DEMO by 1984 - Convererted from the Amiga by Lerxst of Cynix. This demo
performs some impressive rasters and plasma full screen effects and is
highly recommended. THE STONACTION DEMO - A demo from Finland. Press the
keys F1 to F5 for the different screens. There's also a hidden screen and a
short reset demo. Nothing new but well presented and pleasant to watch. I'm
most impressed with the picture show on F3 but it doesn't run on machines
with more (or less) than 1 Meg. All other sub demos require at least 1 Meg.
DEM.3393C Two Cyber Paint animations along with Douglas Little's improved
player program (SPACE to exit). Boot up with this disk and double-click the
required SEQ file to load. Animations are G:C:C:6 and TECDELIT. G:C:C:6 runs
on 1 Meg with the player but requires 2 Meg if you want to load it into
Cyber Paint.
DEM.3394C Two Cyber Paint animations along with Douglas Little's improved
player program (SPACE to exit). Boot up with this disk and double-click the
required SEQ file to load. Animations are CATNAP and CHASERS. Catnap is one
of the best animations ever done on the ST. It starts off slowly but it's
worth the wait. In fact it lasts for about ten minutes! A highly amusing
account of a cat's dream. CATNAP runs on 1 Meg with the player but requires
2 Meg if you want to load it into Cyber Paint.
DEM.3395C Two Cyber Paint animations along with Douglas Little's improved
player program (SPACE to exit). Boot up with this disk and double-click the
required SEQ file to load. Animations are CIRCLES and DEJA_VU. Both feature
solid 3D objects smoothly animated in real time. Deja_Vu requires 1 Meg.
DEM.3396C KLINGON CALAMITY by Maurice Molyneux - An incredibly realistic
self running animation of a Klingon vessel being blown up in outer space.
Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.3397C JUST FUN Part A by DBA - The second demo from a new crew. Features
four sub demos and interviews with each member of the group, which are
selectable by joystick or keyboard. A decent GFA Basic demo.
DEM.3398C HIGH FIDELITY DREAMS by Auru - Choose from eight tunes on the main
menu. All are digitised (possibly tracker tunes) and of an incredibly high
standard. The pices of music featured are Act Of Impulse, Chinese Dream,
Elysium, Enigma, Just Spank It, Macrocosm, Overload and The Sweat Shop. All
appear to be original compositions.
DEM.3399C BEYOND by Kruz - A truly great offering from Finland which
consists of 5 sub demos and a reset demo. The main menu involves steering a
solid 3D spacecraft from one demo to the next. If coordination is not your
strong point, press HELP for an easier main menu!
DEM.3400C DELTA FORCE GOES SVERIGE - This demo is basically a collection of
22 photographs taken by Delta Force on their visit to Sweden for the
Megaleif Coding Convention in April 1992. Each photograph is accompanied by
some descriptive text and the music is by Big Alec of Delta Force. Many
photographs of the top European demo writers.
DEM.3401C THE BLACK DEMO by The Black Cats - A great collection of 10 sub
demos, selectable from a main menu. I should point out that demo 1 won't run
on machines with more than 1 Meg and demo 7 won't run at 60hz. Assuming you
don't have an American machine and don't have more than 1 Meg of memory,
everything works great!
DEM.3402C CHRONICLE - An impressive music demo featuring 32 pieces of music
created with the PSG Tracker. Also on disk is a 'product demo come
advertisement' for the PSG Tracker which is only available direct from the
author. Good sound quality.
DEM.3403C & DEM.3404C THE BEE FOROL DEMO by Sector One - A collection of
11 sub demos (2 are STE only) and a fully playable game. In fact one of the
sub demos is a collection of small demos, each done in 20 lines of GFA
Basic! The majority of demos are of an amazingly high standard and these two
disks are well worth adding to your collection. This is a two disk set and
both disks are required for the demo to run. The Intro drags on for about
ten minutes but is worth watching once. Remember what the BIG Demo did with
bombs, well this one follows a similar vein with the bee! Press the CONTROL
key while BEEFOROL.PRG is loading to skip the intro. You need both disks for
this demo to work correctly.
DEM.3426C A selection of Deluxe Paint animations along with an improved
player program by Martin Packer. BEAR - A circus bear juggling. KINGTUTA -
The famous death mask rotating. TIDES - Watch the tide ris and fall. STEALTH
by Eric Schwartz - Conversion from the Amiga by Terex. Watch the fighter
plane fly across the landscape. WALTER - A highly amusing 'tribute' to all
Amiga haters. A real classic! ST conversion by Terex. TURTLES - Not one for
the kids. Watch Leonardo meet an unsavoury end! A must for all turtle
haters.
DEM.3462C DELUXE PAINT ANIMATIONS - Converted from the Amiga and PC. CANADA
- Watch the Canadian flag blowing in the wind. FLIGHT 2 - Two fighter planes
fly together, one does a barrel roll and you zoom in briefly on both pilots.
JUGETTE - A female juggler doing her version of the famous Amiga Juggler
Demo! KIWI - Watch Kiwi take on an armoured tank, then see the consequences!
PHIL_17S - A low flying aircraft passes a speeding Porsche on the highway.
WANKEL - A model of a basic engine operating. Flight 2 needs 1 Meg, the
others run on a 520.
DEM.3463C DELUXE PAINT ANIMATIONS - Converted from the PC. FLIGHT 1 - Watch
the fighters take off, fly together, then land. Part of a mega animation
which includes Flight 2 on DEM.3462C. BALL 2 - A ball swings back and forth
and you see its reflection in a mirror. EARTH - A hologram of the spinning
globe. The same sort of idea as the BBC globe animation. Flight 1 needs 1
Meg, the others run on a 520.
DEM.3464C THE X-PLOTION DEMO by Imagina - A multi part demo with some
interesting effects. Features great 3D stereo sound, 3D vector ball objects,
fractals and amusing cartoon stills. Rather than the usual multi-part demo
which loads one part at a time, this is more of a continuous demo, requiring
only one disk access in the middle of the demo. Good graphics and sound. STE
ONLY.
DEM.3465C CYBER PAINT ANIMATIONS - A selection of SEQ files which can be
double-clicked and run using Douglas Little's AUTOSEQ player. CAMERA - Watch
the camera turn towards you and the shutter open. The screen then reduces to
miniscule proportions and a pilot flying some sort of helicopter appears.
SPHERE - A transparent sphere travels through Space, magnifying the backdrop
as it goes. STRANGE - A 3D animation set in outer space, advertising a
company called Strange Systems. 42 - The number 42 bounces up and down and
is reflected in a 3 way mirror.
DEM.3466C ANIMAL MINE DENTRO FOR THE 1992 DUSSELDORF MESSE - A continuous
demo for you to sit back and watch. Great tracker music, graphics and
animation. Includes a review of the Falcon 030 (which was launched at the
show) if you read on for long enough. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.3467C ANTI PC MEGADEMO 1 by Public Data Ltd - A demo whose sole aim in
life (are demos alive?) is to promote the ST and Amiga whilst ridiculing the
PC. Some bits are amusing, others are plain silly and the MOD file is well
worth listening to. This demo claims to run equally well on an Amiga if you
have Cross DOS, MessyDOS or similar!
DEM.3468C IF PIGS COULD FLY by Syndicate - A great multi-part demo which
loads data from disk when required. Just press Space to exit the intro and
sit back! Features lots of 3D vector objects, 3D solid objects and several
solid objects rotating inside another solid 3D object! Different effects on
different screens. Great music, graphics and animation throughout.
DEM.3469C EAT MY BOLLOCKS by Equinox - Another demo with a bias towards
solid 3D objects and 3D vector ball objects. A ten part demo which loads
from disk as required. Interesting effects include 3 mini screens moving
across each other and a 3D Mandelbrot set. The spinning sine wave scroller
is unique as well as being unreadable! The guest screen by The Black Cats
features mapping effects onto different faces of 3D objects. Top class
graphics and sound throughout.
DEM.3471C THE FAT DEMO by NATO - A music demo which includes over 50 tunes
from various ST games and demos. As well as the menu screen where you select
the tunes, there's a mugshot of the guy who wrote the demo and a hidden
demo. Personally, I prefer the hidden demo to main menu! The scroller claims
to contain 100k of text and the author offers to mention anyone who can
prove that he has read it all, in his next demo. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.3472C MATHEMATICA by Aura - A rolling demo which has been very well
produced. Features keftales, real time splines, IFS fractals, vector
graphics and 3D bubbles (using 64x64 sprites). A great demo with several
tricks never before seen on the ST. Inspired by similar effects on the
Amiga. Sit back and enjoy! Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.3473C MUSIC FOR THE MASSES 2 by NPG - A collection of 10 excellent MOD
files which can be loaded from a main menu. Brilliant quality.
DEM.3474C THE MISTY DEMOS by Top Notch Software - This demo was created by
ACO and Whee The Fibble to show off their new Misty extension for STOS
Basic. There are two menus, the normal one and the easy one. Swap between
them by pressing the Help key. There are nine sub demos, all of which
demonstrate the graphic capabilities of the Misty extension. The sound's
pretty impressive too. There's also an installer program for putting the
extension onto your STOS Basic and Compiler disks. Just one word of warning,
demo 3 doesn't run on machines with more than 1 Meg. This is the best STOS
demo written to date (Dec '92) and will be hard to beat. I'm not just saying
that because Floppyshop got a mention in the greetings, either!
DEM.3475C AMBIGNEY by CHAOS - A departure from their usual style of demos,
this is a musical and graphical extravaganza! An almost endless stream of
special effects make this demo one which stands out from the crowd. It is
best described as something which could have been created with Trip A Tron
but wasn't! In fact it wouldn't look out of place in a disco. Features
superb effects created from patterns and great music to go with it. Sit
back, relax and enjoy.
DEM.3476C THE ULTIMATE MUSIC DEMO VOL II by PHF - An incredible selection of
music from demos and games. It is menu driven, simply guide the futuristic
warrior around a massive screen with each door leading to a sub menu full of
the work of one or more composers. I counted 18 sub menus containing a total
of 257 pieces of music, but I may have missed some! Collectable not just as
a comprehensive collection of music but for also for its impressive menu.
DEM.3477 SPARKY'S QUARTET MUSIC COMPILATION 1 - A collection of Quartet
tunes which have had their 4V and SET files joined and packed. Also on disk
is a program which lets you do this with your own Quartet files. You can
even restore then to normal if required. All music was arranged by Sparky
and is of a very high standard. Files are BACHOLA, BAD_BOY, FISTFUL,
JUST4FUN, MC_DESR, SLEDGE. Runs in any resolution.
DEM.3478C CONDEMNED by Dimensio - Released at the SUCC Party in Finland on
13th October 1992. This is a 8 part demo including two reset demos and a
great guest screen by Chronicle. The five screens by Condemned are not bad
either. Music plays in stereo and the screens use the extended colour
palette if you have an STE.
DEM.3479C HIBERNATION CAROLS DEMO II by Sewer Software - This is a
collection of 6 Christmas Carols featuring superb graphics (Santa on his
snow mobile) and music. Put together by Sewer Hedgehog and Golden Otter
exclusively for Floppyshop. After each Carol, there's a Mad Max tune and
accompanying digitised picture which would not look out of place on a
Christmas card. A superb followup which even beats Hibernation Carols 1! You
simply must have this one to show off your ST and get everyone into the
Christmas spirit(s)! You must unplug your hard drive to run this demo.
DEM.3480C PEEKS & POKES MUSIC DISK 5 - Titled the GEM-X SLIDESHOW. Each of
the 7 excellent MOD files is accompanied by a rather naughty (but never
revealing) pose of the chidren's cartoon character GEM! The sound quality is
suberb (stereo if you have an STE) and the graphics are amusing. What will
they think of next?
DEM.3481C PEEKS & POKES MUSIC DISK 6 - Another 8 MOD files from the Amiga, 7
of which have accompanying graphics. Two of the MODs were specially written
for this demo. All files are selectable from a main menu this time. The main
menu plays Rob Hubbard's theme to Crazy Comets. Good graphics and sound
(stereo on the STE) as usual.
DEM.3567C THE BIRD MAD GIRL SHOW by The Fraggles - Contrary to what the
title suggests there's not a girl in sight! This demo was put together by a
number of French crews including The Vegetables, Poltergeist, Prism, M Coder
and of course The Fraggles. It features 8 screens accessed from the function
keys. The special effects include fullscreen overscan, a vertical parallax
scroller, 3D vector balls, real time vertical rasters and solid 3D cubes
rotating in real time. One of the screens includes 257 tunes from ST demos
and games and another is the last offering from Poltergeist and then there's
The Watermelon Screen! Good graphics and sound throughout. This demo will
NOT run on machines with more than 1 Meg of memory.
DEM.3568C THE MAIN COURSE by The Hairy Pies - A conversion of The
Nightbreed Show by Hatrick on the Amiga. This is a slideshow of gruesome
faces, the type you'd never like to meet! A stereo soundtrack plays in the
background and the pictures were converted to the STE using PhotChrome by
Douglas Little. STE ONLY.
DEM.3580C HSCROLL - A short demo showing the power of the STE's hardware
scrolling. You can subsitute your own picture in place of the one supplied
if you like! WORLD BEAT by The Black Cats - A great intro with two bouncing
rotating world globes along with the customary scrolltext. The music is an
original adaptation of a Pet Shop Boys hit, in stereo. ILLUSION STE by The
Caped Crusader - A superb demo which features fullscreen parallax
distortion, vertical rasters (with various effects), plasma effects and a
50khz stereo soundtrack. There are also some unusual raster effects, several
of which have not been seen before. Needs 1 Meg. ARMADA IS DEAD by
Aggression - This is a fractals demo which uses the Julia set. There are
numerous fractals being generated at 120 iterations and displaying 31
colours on screen. The demo includes 50khz Protracker music in stereo and
the usual scrolltext. Needs 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.3594C DELUXE PAINT ANIMATIONS - These have been converted from FLI
format on the PC. TIME3 - As the sand flows through the egg timer, watch the
candle burn down and the clock melt! VHAND - A demonstration made for
medical purposes. Watch the human hand and wrist turn 180 degrees, the flesh
vanish and bones appear. The skeletal image then rotates a further 180
degrees. VHAND needs 1 Meg. Press ESC to exit one animation and load the
next.
DEM.3595C DELUXE PAINT ANIMATIONS - These have been converted from FLI
format on the PC. CHESHIRE - Watch the face of the Cheshire cat mystically
appear, give a big grin and disappear just as spectacularly. CLOWNS - Watch
a cartoonish clown facr rotate against a background picture of a human
clown's face. FLASHLIT - The component parts of a torch assemble and
illuminate the title of what looks like a training video. FLASHLIT needs 1
Meg.
DEM.3596C THE O-DEMO by Oxygene - This is Oxygene's last demo on the ST
before they move onto the Falcon. As usual, it features great music and
graphics. There are ten screens selectable from a main menu, including one
hidden one and another which is STE only. The hidden demo is in fact a
replacement loader which makes the Genius Demo run on all STs! The reset
demo contains the credits. You guide a bouncing ball around the main menu,
bouncing from one platform to another. Each door enters another demo. The
ball is difficult to control so there's a few transporter pads to take you
back to the beginning and catch the screens you missed. This is a great demo
with fast wire frame graphics, solid 3D vector graphics, a ball scroller,
parallax scroller, some nice effects with vertical rasters and much more!
DEM.3597C & DEM.3598C THE VENTURA DEMO by The Overlanders - The intro
sequence was originally intended as an intro to a game they were coding but
never finished. Follow the storyline and watch the alien get into his
Delorean and fly off in 'Back To The Future' style. Just as lands on a far
away planet and gets out of his vehicle you are ready for the game to start
but get the main menu of The Ventura Demo! Don't worry, you won't be
disappointed. The intro was incredible and the main menu is impressive too.
Various large animated sprites make it interesting to watch before you'll
even consider entering a demo! The demo proper consists of 11 sub demos and
a reset demo, none of which you can complain about. There's plenty of
fullscreen stuff, parallax scrolling, fullscreen distortions, bobs and more
bobs, Spectrum 512 picture show, you name it and Ventura has it. This is a
really impressive demo which has 3.5 Meg of graphics alone compacted into
it! The sound, graphics and animation are all superb. You'll need both disks
though!
DEM.3599C & DEM.3600C THE MEGA XXXX DEMO by Steve Jarrett - A worthy
followup to the 91 Demo on DEM.743C. This two disk set features no less than
20 sub demos, including 4 guest screens, which are loaded from a main menu.
The intro itself is a fullscreen distorting scroller! The demo can be run
from either disk but you obviously need both disks if you want to see all
the sub demos! The screens are a mixed bunch and include such effects as
parallax scrolling, multi-plane scrollers, fullscreen demos, unlimited bobs
demos (one of which you can control yourself) and several demos created
using the Misty STOS extension on DEM.3474C. If that's not enough for you,
there's a music demo with 34 pieces of music from ST games!
DEM.3621C THE GROTESQUE DEMO - A great offering from Omega, which was rated
very highly by ST Magazine (France). It features great graphics, strobe
effects and excellent sound. This is a real roller coaster of a demo with
flashing lights and synchronisation between drums being beaten by drumsticks
in perfect co-ordination with dancing figures. Definitely one of the best.
Needs 1 Meg. NOT TOS 2.06 upwards. STE ONLY.
DEM.3622C THE SMILE DEMO by Digi Talis - An English demo containing two
rave music samples and a scroller. It is however the scroller screen which
lets the disk down, as the scoll text is aim more at a adult audience in
places. The two samples are clear, and played in conjuction with several
layered star field effects. There is also the smiley face, this time wire
frame, and not in bright yellow one for once!
DEM.3624C THE REVOLUTION DEMO by STAX - Once you have viewed the excellent
intro sequence, you proceed to the starfield that the demo is based in. You
have to pilot your spaceship around various starfields to gain access to the
demo screens (no ladders, and doors in this menu!). The screens are produced
by various demo crews. Before embarking, its a good idea to read the online
manual, as no further help is given for piloting your ship. The demo screens
have all the usual effects such as full screens, sampled sound, scrollers,
and even a car racing game if you can find it! The graphics in both the
introduction and the demo screens are clearly drawn and add to the
atmosphere.
DEM.3625C MATHEMATIQUE SQUIOPHRENES by Dune - Another in the growing
collection of demos based around mathematically calculated shapes. This demo
is a collection of fractals, wire frame shapes and star fields. The fractals
are still but in full colour. There are also several layered star fields
which are joined by the wire frames shapes. The wire framed shapes move
around the screen, interweaving with the stars in some places. The demo ends
with the credits and the greetings. Falcon compatible.
DEM.3628 SPARKY'S QUARTET MUSIC COMPILATION DISK 2 - Another in the
collection of excellent Quartet tunes by Sparkey. Quartet files on disk are
ABSENTIA, DOGSLIFE, MGFIELD2, and WARPIECE. Dan Panke's QPlay 3 is included
along with programs for combining and splitting the Quartet songs.
DEM.3629C BIG ALEC - A colection of 16 pieces of soundchip music by Big
Alec from Delta Force. The total listening time is about 48 minutes! The
customary scroller's there too. GUDUL - A six screened Gen 4 entry. The
screens contain the scrollers, samples and graphic effects such as full
screens and bouncing dots. Have your foreign dictionaries ready as the menu
scroller bursts into French at times. XIAMENU 1 - A chip music demo
containing sixteen original tunes.
DEM.3630C THE BEDLAM DEMO by Chaos - Chaos breaks out onto the ST again. The
short introduction announces the demo and its creators. The main demo takes
a while to load, but it's well worth the wait. It comprises of various
fractals and lots of patterns made out of circles and lines which are always
changing. These patterns, when combined with the background music, make the
demo a joy to watch, and to listen to. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.3650C PEEKS AND POKES MUSIC SHOW 7 - A collection of 8 modules with
accompanying pictures from the Amiga. The quality is very good as you would
expect. You get stereo sound if you have an STE.
DEM.3651C THE MANIC DEMO by The Opposition - Steer your car around the
racetrack to find the all important nine entrances to the nine sub-demos.
You have to do a spot of off road driving to gain access to all of the
screens! The screens contain three dimensional balls, graphics, music,
plenty of scrollers and two Mad Max guest screens with 77 soundchip tunes.
DEM.3653C MEGAFUN 3 PARTY DEMO - Have you ever wanted to know what happens
at a demo party? Now you can find out what happens, and what the demo coders
really look like. This demo takes you behind the scenes of one of the recent
'coding conventions'. The visuals are provided in the form of digitised
graphics which have been taken with a video camera, the audio is a nice
original tune. There are several screens of pictures and some scroll text to
read in between them. Warning - Contains bad language.
DEM.3666C & DEM.3667C DREAMZONE by The Wild Boys - Once you're past the
introduction which uses fading text and parallax scrolling balls, you load
the main menu. It is a platforms and ladders type affair which scrolls in
all directions. You have to guide Cool J Charlie around the screen to find
the doors which lead to the demos. Not all the screens are easy to reach and
it's quite a chellenge getting into some of them! Effects used include
vector balls and full screen effects with scrollers. The megatwister screen
is very impressive with numerous special effects. There is also a guest
screen by Nexus and a demo of a game by The Wild Boys. Dreamzone is a good
two disk demo with a nice playable menu and plenty of screens.
DEM.3668C 3 DELUXE PAINT ANIMATIONS. FRACZOOM - An animated full colour
fractal graphic. JET - A three dimensional circle which rotates across the
screen. VOYAGER - The voyage of a space craft on its way to an unknown
planet. YAMADEMO - A nice little music demo with a scroller and one of the
strangest graphical equalisers I've ever seen! It's three dimensional
boulder which changes shape, size, rotates and changes to different shades
of yellow with the background music. JEDI - An entry to a 3.5k competition.
It features three screens. The first contains lines which seem to appear at
random across the screen to make a pattern. The second screen is made up of
green and yellow colour, which blends on screen to make a pattern. The last
is strange it almost devies decription! It contains parallel lines of small
red and blue squares. These pass in front or behind other lines at a fair
speed! SWAMPNIC - A swamp of colour which intermingles on screen. It's very
well done with the colours changing and moving in uneven bands horizontally
across the screen in real time.
DEM.3669C DELUXE PAINT ANIMATIONS. DOGGIE - Watch the famous Dulux paint
dog. CANCRUSH - As the name suggests, the crushing of a can. CHOMP - A hand
drawn face having a good feed! DOGS - A running dog. FACE - A moving face
borrowed from the Amiga. RUNTV - A television running through the streets.
SPACE - The Space Shuttle flying over the earth. STARTREK - The Klingons
attack the viewers of this animation! WALK - A hand drawn man having a walk.
WOW - An advert for the program Deluxe Paint, with text coming in from all
angles.
DEM.3695C MUSIC DREAM 2 by Electronic Images - An impressive collection of
10 original sountracks in amazing high quality stereo. Select them using the
mouse on a main menu screen. The menu itself is well presented graphically
and the spacial stereo is 'music to your ears'! The pieces are Chinese
Dream, Forgotten Minds, Utterly Wierd, Just Spank It, Disaster Is Obvious,
Curse of Pacman, Mega End, Macrocosm, Vaxjo by Night and Blues. STE ONLY.
DEM.3696C BIRDS OF PREY INTRO by ESD - This is the amazing intro sequence
to the STE game that never was! It was being developed by Argonaut Software
for Electronic Arts when they took the decision to drop all future and
present ST projects. The game will never be seen but the intro is a
masterpiece for all to savour. It features an animation of fighter planes in
combat flying over a fractal generated landscape. This is accompanied by the
digitised sound of the fighters' engines and pilots' voice overs. Great
stereo sound and incredible graphics. A classic. Needs 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.367OC THE REACTIVATE DEMO by Insanity - A collection of six
soundtracker modules. They are played using routines by Griff's of
InnerCirle. They play normally on an STFM and in stereo on a STE. You can
also output to Prosound, MV16, and the various Replay cartridges. The
loading screen is all the graphics you're going to get but the music is very
well composed. The modules included are ABSENCE, BIRD, COMA, DOLLY, EMPTY
and IMAGE.
DEM.3710C DREAMS DENTRO by Animal Mine - An excellent German demo which
begins like a film introduction, with the coders introducing themselves and
their new demo. There's no menu, the screens simply follow on from each
other. There are not that many screens, but the quality is amongst the best
seen on the ST and this is accompanied by excellent sound throughout.
Graphic effects include wire frame mountains which zoom in and out and move
around the sceen, realtime raytraced spinning objects, rapidly generated
fractal mountains and the usual 3D vector objects. There's also an animation
of the launch of a space craft and its subsequent journey. It all ends with
the greetings and credits which are once again displayed as a film type
scroller.
DEM.3711C & DEM.3712C ADRENALINE DENTRO - A two disk continuous (i.e.
no menu) dentro. Watch the 'Amiga Effect', the 'Psychedelic Tour' and then a
3D square transform into a 'rubber square' which flops around the screen.
There are a few scrollers including rotating ones, and several greetings
screens. If that's not enough, there's a Space trip through parallax
starfields and another screen which has pictures made up from dots which
fade into other pictures. The last screen is yet more 3D objects and
features most of those seen on previous screens. A number of pictures appear
between the sub demos. These include dragons, animals and people. Another
excellent dentro to add to your collection.
DEM.3713C & DEM.3714C THE ANOMALY MEGADEMO BY MJJ PRODUCTIONS - The
menu for this megademo is similar to the game Marble Madness, where you
guide a sphere around a 3D landscape. Unlike Marble Madness, you can't fall
off the edge! There are about ten easily accessible screens, plus some which
are near impossible to get to. The screens include such novel ideas as
Karaoke amongst others! There are guest screens by top coders such as
Oxygene, DNT and Future Minds. These feature such things as wire frame
objects with scrollers suspended inside, fractals, normal and half size
scrollers, with various musical and graphical effects throughout. Just to
amuse you, there's a story about Mr Costaud, an odd character who would not
be out of place in the Mr Men series! The Anomaly Megademo has a good menu
which offers a challenge and you won't be disappointed with the screens
either.
DEM.3769C BURNING ILLUSION by DNT - This demo contains several screens
which follow on from each other. Unfortunately you cannot skip screens. This
is compensated for by the quality of the screens on offer. Digitised music
plays throughout. Effects include filled vectors, vector bobs, vectors
created with 'rock' sprites, fractal type effects, rasters, and objects
created with dots, which bounce around the screen. Burning Illusion has a
little bit of everything. NOT TOS 2.06 upwards.
DEM.3770C IFF Animations Disk 1 by MUG UK - A collection of excellent FLI
animations converted from the PC using FLI2IFF on ART.3412. Animations are
B-BALL, BETTY BOO, BOSS TALK, BUGS, C4 LOGO, GLASS, HANDS, JABBER, TIGERCAT,
TURBIN, and UTT.
DEM.3771C IFF Animations Disk 2 by MUG UK - A collection of excellent FLI
animations converted from the PC using FLI2IFF on ART.3412. Animations are
CLOWN, COASTER, CONE, DOGBOT and FISH.
DEM.3772C THE NEVER AND FOREVER DEMO (and Utilities) by STEW - A 10 screen
demo written entirely in GFA Basic, with a number of utilities thrown in for
good measure. The sub-demos are selected from a simple menu. Features
include parallax scrolling and other graphical effects (like moving
backgrounds with text on them). There are scrollers of every type. Ordinary
ones, multi-coloured ones, large ones, small ones, you name it! At one point
six scrollers appear on screen at once. Stew even goes one better than OVR
by having 36 sprites on screen at once. The only bad thing about this demo
is the guest screen, which is pretty poor. The utilities are FONT2BIN -
Converts graphics or fonts to binary files and vice versa. PLOTTER - A
programmer's utility which allows you to plot the path you want your sprite
to follow, by hand rather than using complicated formulae. CONVERT -
Converts Easyrider disassembled source files into smaller ones. STEWP - A
utility for BBS Sysops which allows them to create a top ten upload/download
chart (supplied in ZIP format).
DEM.3773C A GRUMBLER IN THE RUTTING SEASON by Electricity - A great intro
starts this demo off. The main menu is a series of 3D rooms. Simply guide
the robot around and go through the doors leading to the ten rooms. Each
room contains a door leading to the previous room, another to the next room
and any others lead to that room's demo (most of which are fullscreen).
Effects include vertical rasters, shaded bobs, scrollers, fractals,
starfields etc. The best screen is a guest screen by Sanity which has a
series of Atari logos which are zoomed in and out to give a 'bouncing ball'
effect. A great demo which is well worth adding to your collection. NOT TOS
1.62 upwards.
DEM.3782C GIZMO by The Poltergeists and The Vegetables - A seven screen
demo with an oriental feel to it. The screens have scrollers shooting all
over them, with great hand drawn graphics. The fonts, like the graphics,
have this oriental feeling which is carried throughout the demo. The sound
is a combination of both chip music and digital stuff. The 'Wings Of Death'
screen has the digitised music from the game as well as a transparent
scroller which is very hard to read! Pressing reset brings up the
Poltergeists' logo. NOT TOS 2.06 upwards.
DEM.3785C E605 by Light - A great demo which is well worth having. It
starts off with a 'flight' over a plotted landscape, then goes to a massive
bouncing globe on a no border screen. 3D bobs make an appearance but what
makes them different is their link into wireframe 3D objects, some of which
are quite complex. A selection of solid 3D vector objects also make an
appearance. STE ONLY.
DEM.3786C COSMIC JAM by Imagina - A 'rolling' demo rather than the usual
multi-demo. Effects include 3D multi-coloured polygons (the best of which
features one object rotating inside another), keftales and more. It ends
with a superb animation sequence followed by the credits. A stereo
soundtrack plays throughout. Needs 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.3787C KNOCKING AT KRYSTAL'S DOORS by FMC Connexion - A great multi-part
demo with stereo sound and excellent graphics. Effects including fast
zooming in and out to chequered background (on interlaced screen), different
objects animated in front and behind each other in different bitplanes, some
superb full screen wibbly wobbly effects and an excellent slideshow. You
must switch off your machine for at least 30 seconds before running this
demo or you will experience odd (even disasterous) effects! Stereo
soundtrack (if you have an STE) plays throughout most of the demo. Although
this demo will run on an STFM, the best bits are STE only and are replaced
with blank screens on the STFM!
DEM.3792C CHACONA by The Slaytanic Cult - An original TCB Tracker MOD file
with on screen controls over left and right channels, treble, bass and
volume. Play around with it for some interesting effects. If that's not
enough, you get a scrolltext too! GOGGDEMO by Unit 17 - A collection of 4
MOD files selectable from the function keys. The screen is overscanned in
all directions with raster bars, a bouncing logo and a scrolltext which is
also mirrored in the bottom border. The screen display plays up on some
monitors and is stable on others. However, the sound quality is great at
25khz in stereo. GOGGDEMO needs 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.3793C THE EXPRESSO DEMO by Adrenaline of THK - A six screen (plus
reset) demo mostly in GFA Basic. The demos are of a reasonable quality for
GFA Basic. By the way, every time the writing turns yellow you have to press
SPACE to continue! Turns off your machine for at least 30 seconds before
running this one or it's liable to lock up on some screens. The Cobra screen
is pretty amazing. STE ONLY.
DEM.3794C THE BEGINNING OF THE ENDING MEGADEMO by Offbase - The demo
commences with an impressive action packed animation. There are a further
six sub-demos following this. The first is a breakout game with a
difference. If you score the required points, it progresses to a hidden
demo. The remaining five have rasters, sprites, various graphic and sonic
effects and scrollers. An unusual screen is called Gobbo. It has a picture
of three turtle-like creatures in a yard, the digitised sound starts and the
turtles' mouths move in motion with sound. The guest screen is by TML. It is
a humorous Christmas screen with scrollers and a picture of Santa smoking a
cigar. Comical sound effects are added to the Carols playing in the
background.
DEM.3795C FUTURETIME VI - 'ALIEN ARCHITECTURE' by Neil Donnan - A
collection of 7 Cyber Animations which are all part of the 'Future Series'.
As you would expect from such a title, the animations are set in the future.
There are no words, no music just the animations. The author gives no
description to accompany the animations, merely describing them as "a
stimulus to the imagination of the user". Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.3796C THE PLUCKED GOOSE DEMO BY MJJ PRODUCTIONS - A ten demo collection
written in GFA Basic, which includes contributions by Oxygene, The
Hemeroids, The Eagles and Fantasy. The menu is fairly straightforward and
has a scroller running above it. The screens include such effects as
scrollers, multi parallax layers and spinning balls which move around the
screen, multiplying as they go. In places there several things happening on
screen at once, such as scrollers, ball rolls and spinning sprites. There's
audience participation in the Hemeroids screen as you get to change the
music and the pattern the balls follow. Written in Basic? You'll never
believe it! WARNING - contains a lot of bad language.
DEM.3797C GURK by Crystalic and Anatomica - A collection of five sub-demos.
Excellent graphics and some decent chip music accompany the usual scrollers
and bobs. Various effects are added to the scrollers and bobs to make it all
a bit more interesting. The last screen (before the credits) is called
Trackmania and allows you to play five excellent MOD files. The credits
screen also features tracker music. Upon pressing reset, Donald Duck pops
up, to question your judgement.
DEM.3798 X-TREAM INTRODUCTIONS - A collection of three small demos from a
lesser known group. The first one is an invitation to a demo coding party.
If features scrollers, a fullscreen effect and a few bouncing shapes. The
second demo features shaded bobs of different colours, all making different
patterns. The last is called Xtream, which is simply a good excuse to make a
lot of digital noise and read another scroller! It has vertical raster bars
in it too. Music plays throughout all three demos.
DEM.3799C THE NEXT GENERATION by Warning Sign - A bat flies across the
screen, a picture of Dracula appears and the demo is announced! This demo
consists of a collection of well drawn Spectrum 512 pictures. The pictures
look original and are mostly futuristic in design. Chip music plays
throughout. NOT STE.
DEM.3800C WORLD OF WONDERS by NPG - Another 'rolling' demo (i.e. no menu).
The first screen creates objects from vast numbers of dots. You can select
which shapes are created, by pressing the function keys. The rest of the
screens all feature vector graphics, either filled or wire frame. Varying
effects are applied to these, the Gelee cube being a first! Some original
artwork of monsters and futuristic characters also make an appearance, as do
digitised pictures of the coders themselves. A great demo from NPG.
DEM.3906C SEWER SOFTWARE PICTURE DISK 3 "THE CATS DISK" - A great intro
followed by a collection of 19 high quality digitised pictures of cats. The
pictures are accompanied by chip music and a scroller.
DEM.3911C THE BRAINLESS INSTITUTE'S 3D DEMO - As the names suggest, this
demo from The Brainless Institute is all about 3D shapes. The graphics are
displayed over the much used starfield effect. There are countless different
solid 3D shapes which are accompanied by some good music. STE ONLY.
DEM.3912C A LITTLE BIT INSANE by Lazer of Independent - Another tracker
demo. The intro features eight-track stereo music. This is followed by the
menu from which you choose your music. It has a four track graphic equaliser
which moves to the beat of the music. There are seven stereo tracks to
listen to. Needs 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.3914C CYBER ANIMATIONS - A collection of 5 animations produced with
Cyber Paint. ANTICADD - A rotating skyscraper, built in the shape of the
letter A, viewed from above. FACEBALL - Madonna's face on a rotating,
bouncing ball. The ball is bouncing on a trampoline-like surface. PSLOGO -
Appears to be an advert for a Atari Dealer as it is a rotating Atari logo
with the words "Perfect Solution" on it. ROLLSAMF - Another face applied to
a shape and then animated. This time the face is on a tube which rolls in an
upwards direction and grows smaller as it heads for the top left hand corner
of your screen. SMUSH - A simple animation of a word being dropped from the
top of the screen, hitting its corresponding reflection, and expanding in a
horizontal direction.
DEM.3949C WORLD OF MUSIC by NPG - The followup to World Of Wonders. This
demo has eighteen music tracks which will take you about one hour to listen
to in their entirety. Half the screen has a peculiar clown in it and the
other half displays various graphic effects such as the famous wave forms,
fractals, shaded bobs and so on. The music is very good, and is choosen by
pressing a function key, then selecting a track from a the list. The
scroller says that this could be the last NPG contribution to the ST demo
scene, so don't miss out on this one, as its one of the better sound demos.
Switch off your ST for about 30 seconds before running or you'll get
corruption on the screen!
DEM.3951C THE FAREWELL DEMO by Passion - Possibly the last demo from the
French group Passion (although it's the first one in our collection!). It
has seven screens and can be installed onto a hard disk. The screens follow
on one from another, instead of using a menu. There is only one scroller in
all seven screens which makes a pleasant change. The scroller differs from
the usual ones in that it winds its way up the screen from the bottom to
top. A couple of the screens have 3D objects which bounce around the screen.
In one screen, they bounce about like a jelly, changing shape as they move
around. The wire frame graphics also change shape in one of the screens,
morphing from one shape to another. There is also a starfield screen, where
the stars come toward you (eg Star Trek effect). You can alter the flight
paths and altitude using a joystick. The Farewell Demo has a good selection
of screens, pity there hadn't been a few more.
DEM.3952C UPSCALE MEGADEMO by Ellipse - A nine screen (including reset
demo) demo, several of which are multi-part demos. The menu itself is rather
uninspiring, being nothing more than a list of names of the demos. The
screens have wire frame graphics, chip music, scrollers and graphic
equalizers. There's a full screen demo which is filled completely with small
balls, which move up and down, left and right. Across the moving balls is a
moving logo. The screen "colorful" has a cute robot walking across it, as
well as three scrollers. The demo also has its own game where you have to
run around a maze and try to find the source code disks. It's not as easy as
you think, since only the immediate area around you is lit up. Playing
against a time limit makes the game a real challenge. The game adds that
little something extra, to a demo which has a fairly average selection of
screens. The last screen is the reset demo, which is the old favourite, a
chain of balls which go around the screen in various patterns.
DEM.3953C PEEKS AND POKES MUSIC DISK 3 - Another in the series of Peeks and
Pokes disks. Another collection of excellent Amiga sound modules (in stereo
if you have an STE) accompanied by some very good graphics. The graphics
include futuristic towns, aliens, cats and a skeletons.
DEM.3990C & DEM.3991C 'PETE' THE GREAT BRITISH INTERNATIONAL ST PARTY -
A collection of 17 (including 3 STE only) great screens coded at a meeting
of some of the ST's best known demo coders (mostly British), including
Chaos, Electronic Images, Stew, Ripped Off, Digi Talis, The Fingerbobs and
The Untouchables. The screens have the usual effects such as full screens,
star fields (of various types), 3D shapes, sampled and chip music, and lots
more. The Wild Boys' screen shows several effects at once. It has two lots
of 3D blocks rotating in a ferris wheel like effect. There are also rotating
stars and some other shapes on screen. Very impressive! Chaos also have a
couple of screens including the main menu. There are also four screens which
were coded in twenty four hours (or less). These are very good considering
the time limit. The Untouchables' contribution begins with a nice sample and
progresses to a chaos-like plasma effect. Electronic Images have done a
meteor storm which then transforms into something completely different. If
you don't have an STE, borrow one to see the Fingerbobs' 2nd screen! This
two disk set can only be described as a 'great' British demo.
DEM.4229C ULTIMATE STE MEGADEMO - A megademo with a difference. Select the
type of demo you wish to load by chosing the appropriate disk on the screen.
There are three types of demo:- music, full screen effects and sprities.
There are four full screen demos, three stereo music demos and three sprite
demos, one of which is actually a game, similar in many ways to Chess. Ten
screens designed to show off the technical merits of the STE over the normal
ST range. STE ONLY.
DEM.4230C OCEAN DEMO by Sad - A four tune tracker type demo. The main
screen is a chequered floor (with the letters S A D bouncing up and down)
and mini digitised pictures of the coders at the top. There's also a
scroller written in French! Features an original selection of tunes (in
stereo of course). STE ONLY.
DEM.4250C THE 1992 XMAS DEMO by Imagina - An excellent stereo soundtrack
accompanies several solid and semi-transparent 3D objects (some quite
complex) which rotate and spin in real time. The demo doesn't do much else
scrolltext runs throughout. Needs 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.4297C THE SWISS MEGA DEMO - The introduction takes the form of a short
story, accompanied by well drawn graphics. It tells the story, believe it if
you will, of how the demo came to be. The main menu reminds you of the
ground breaking Knight Lore game by Ultimate on the ZX Spectrum, both in
terms of graphics and layout. Puzzles have to be solved most of the time to
gain access to the exits. The demo screens feature all the usual effects.
However, everything is viewed from the side in 3D and it can often be
difficult working out the perspective! It would be a good idea to design a
map, and it would have been nice if you could save your position so that you
could go back to the demo where you left it. Apart from that, this is a
great demo which presents a good challenge. NOT TOS 1.62 upwards.
DEM.4298C VARIOUS DEMOS - A collection of four totally unconnected demos
from several different coders. DRACULA - The first ST demo from a French
coder known as Dracula. It is fairly simple, starting with a spinning wire
frame Atari logo, progressing to a spinning three dimensional block. A voice
yells at you, then an egg pops out of the box. JOSEPH'S HOLIDAY by Wacko
Software - This demo was created with STOS and Kozmic and has two scrollers,
chip music which can be changed using the function keys, and lots of colours
cycling rapidly, which can make reading the scroller a problem! The last two
demos are animations created with Lexicor's Chronos 3D. FLUTTERA - A
butterfly which flutters around the screen with its shadow over the ground
reflected by a wireframe lamp. LOWMORPH - A 3D wiremesh face forms out of a
series of straight lines. Both animations show the power of this new force
in ST graphic animation.
DEM.4299C FACE CHANGE - An excellent animation created using Lexicor's
Chronos 3D. It shows a man's head and shoulders then proceeds to animate,
bend, distort, separate bit planes, cut the image into two, turn it upside
down and so on. This is an excellent quality life-like animation using
numerous special effects. A hard drive is required. One Meg is required to
play the animation from disk, two Meg if you want to play it from memory.
DEM.4300C OXYGENE - A short demo from the French crew Oxygene. The screen
has the scroller, chip music and the sphere moving around the screen with
its tail following it in a snake-like formation. The purpose of the demo is
to show 21, 4-bitplane 32x32 sprites on screen at once and it works! PURE3 -
A great little demo by Legacy. It features various vector objects, starfield
effects and shapes created from dots. This demo looks like an early version
of Legacy's offering in Froggies Over The Fence (DEM.4360C, DEM.4361C and
DEM.4362C). SMELLS LIKE SCREEN SPIRIT by The Deviant Corporation - This demo
has several effects which are displayed alongside a digitised rock
soundtrack. The display returns to a graphic equaliser after each effect up
the graphic equaliser is an odd one in that it does not consist of three
moving bars. Instead it has lots of different coloured lines waving around
in the centre of the screen. The effects include plasmas and gouraud shaded
cubes. A very different (perhaps even unconventional) small demo which
still manages to appeal.
DEM.4325C & DEM.4326C GARCIMORE AIME LES MOULES by Fantasy - A different
type of demo. None of the usual effects are there. Instead, they have opted
for a more audio/visual production with lots of good tracks which change in
sequence with the action on screen. The visual side features several
animations, the best of which is that of an insect walking. The credits are
twenty three pages long and are luckily kept back to the end of the demo!
All the text is in French but don't let that put you off as the demos
themselves are worth seeing.
DEM.4327C THE M.M.M. EXPERIENCE by The Hemoroids - A collection of ten
tracker modules chosen from a menu. The modules include BLINDED BY FAITH, AN
ENDLESS WORLD, and AFTER ALL WE TRIED. A short text accompanies each module
and a lengthy scroller runs throughout the demo. The quality of the modules
is very good, making full use of the STE's stereo capabilities. STE ONLY.
DEM.4328C GOBI TOONS by Dune - Another great French STE demo which features
atmospheric stereo sound throughout. It has some excellent pictures and 3D
wireframe and solid graphics. At one point there's a moving 3D cube with the
Dune logo inside it. The credits and scoller appear right at the end. Needs
1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.4333C ECSTASY (no its not a addictive demo!) by ICE - The demo starts
off with a solid 3D spacecraft on a moving chequered background. It then
proceeds to a number of shaded bobs screens, then you fly through a solid 3D
world. A number of other effects with solid and wireframe 3D objects and dot
patterns concludes this demo. An excellent soundtrack plays throughout.
ECSTASY 2 by ICE - This demo is very much like the first one, except that
the music is more ravey and there are more vectors, wire frame graphics and
other effects like solid 3D shapes rotating inside other solid 3D shapes.
Ecstasy 2 has a scroller which Ecstasy 1 lacks, the scroller does however,
have some swearing at the start. Both demos need 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.4334C THE EPPS DEMO by Unit Seventeen - A very simple demo with a single
graphic screen bouncing around and a scroller running accross the bottom
with a tune playing in the background. ELECTROCUTION 2 by Sphere - The
followup to DEM.761C. Different objects constructed from solid 3D balls
appear on screen and are rotated through all three axis. You can alter the
speed and axis through which the structure rotates by pressing the function
keys. There's the usual scroller and stereo sound throughout. Both demos
need 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.4335C LIGHT by GCS - A picture of a planet bounces around the screen at
quite a speed. It bounces in all four directions and you get rather light-
headed trying to follow it. Perhaps this is how the demo got its name! In
addition, three spheres move around the screen and a scroller runs along the
bottom. THE ENCHANTED DEMO by ICE - This is ICE's first STE demo. The intro
screen changes to one which has a scroller, moving chequered floor (which
constantly changes colour), three bar graphic equalizers and some music
playing in the background. Both screens use no borders. The reset demo gives
contact addresses for the programmers. STE ONLY.
DEM.4336C DIGITAL WORLD by ICE - Starts off with a rather long-winded
introduction which has the names of the coders shooting around the screen.
The demo itself consists of numerous 3D wireframe objects displayed on an
overscanned screen. The music is of the techno/rap style and the 3D
wireframe objects often move and change shape to the sound of the music.
Needs 1 Meg. SLIME BALLS by Steelwings - A row of vector bobs bounce around
in the centre of the screen and are distorted into rather odd shapes from
time to time. A scroller features as does background music. STE ONLY.
DEM.4356C THE TRIBAL DEMO by Adrenaline - The followup to the Expresso Demo
(STE Only) on DEM.3793C. There are two versions of the demo on disk, a
normal ST(FM) one and an STE enchanced version. The STFM demo is mainly an
advertisement for future releases by these demo coders. The graphics include
a dancing lemming and the audio comprises of a good background track which
plays all the time. The STE version has better sound on which you can alter
the bass, treble and volume. The credit screens can be moved up and down
with the arrow keys and the scrolling of the screen is very smooth, taking
full advantage of the STE's additional hardware. The STE version also has a
few additional screens to the STFM version.
DEM.4357C THE AMIGA SOUND DEMO by Slayer - A simple demo which has a
scroller, picture and some music. The picture is of a aircraft pilot in a
desert, with the scroller running along the bottom of it. The music consists
of six tracks which have been taken from the Amiga and are selected by
pressing the appropriate number keys. The tracks are Space House, Aces High
2, Show, Telephone, Parting Song and Hoc-Beat. Press SPACE (without first
having selected a tune) and you will exit to three small intros by The
Slayer.
DEM.4358C & DEM.4359C TRAOU'N INT KET BET GRAET BEN BREMAN by Adrenaline -
This, their biggest demo yet, is spread over two disks. The demo screens
are displayed in the middle of the screen. The top and bottom borders are
not used, but the right and left are. The introduction is straightforward
enough but it gets better! Chip music is played throughout the entire demo.
The screens follow one and other, so you have to watch them all and can't
skip any you don't like. They do not contain any new breakthroughs, instead
they have some of the best filled 3D vectors, wire frame graphics and
rotating effects to be seen. The small balls also make their return as they
move around the screen forming into different shapes. There are vector
shapes moving around the screen and sometimes filling the screen. There are
no real scrollers, instead there's a couple of screens of credits which form
from dots merging together. There's also a selection of original drawn
graphics spread across the two disks. One of the best effects is the dot
pictures which transform from one to another by moving the dots in real
time. Adrenaline's best yet! Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.4413C THE TECHNO DEMO by NLC - A rather good rave/techno demo featuring
stereo sound with fast and furious graphics. The best of these is a
silhouette of a dancer who moves in time to the music while the screen is
flashing. At the same time as this is happening, there's a rotating
chequered pattern pulsating in the background. Other effects include
spotlights, lazers, drums and spinning text. Perhaps one of the best
rave/techno demos around. Needs 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.4414C THE CRASH IN HELL TRACKMO by Abstract - Starts off with a short
intro which consists of several 3D wireframe and sinus-dot patterns. This
then exits to the main demo. Various 3D objects (formed from small coloured
balls) are then flown rapidly across the screen. After the balls we move
onto the shooting stars which create patterns in their wake. These are
followed by perhaps one of the best examples of shaded bobs on the ST. There
are several more screens with 3D objects, a giant scroller and a few good
graphic screens. The whole demo is accompanied by great music. If you have a
1 Meg STE, the music is in stereo! Falcon compatible too!
DEM.4415C THE HEMOROIDS MENU PACK 1 - A compilation of STE demos put
together by The Hemeroids. THE BRACE DEMO by Diamond Design - This is
Brace's first appearance on an STE as the original demo was ST(FM) only. It
has all the usual graphic effects including 3D wireframe and solid graphics
which move around the screen. There's a trip in a tunnel made from moving
dots (sub- titled "A Trip To London with Eurotunnel!"). The dots make
another appearance when they smoothly morph from one shape to another (it
looks better than it sounds!). In addition there's a few 'elastic' objects
including an 'alcoholic' cube! The sound effects are also very good. All in
all, a great demo. ECSTASY by ICE - A brilliant fullscreen demo with lots of
stereo sound and plenty of 3D objects flying around. Needs 1 Meg. SYNERGY
MUSIC DISK - A selection of six original tracks created using a program
called Chip-Mon. Very good quality for chip based music. X-PROTRACKER by
Eagle of Sentry - An adaptation of Protracker with several enhancements.
This is not a demo, but a fully fledged tracker program. Unfortunately,
there was no space on the disk to include any MOD files! STE ONLY.
DEM.4416C THE EDGE OF PANIC by ACCS - Kicks off with the credits, then
moves onto the main demo. You get 3D wireframe graphics, tunnels made up of
small dots and large globes which change shape, all displayed fullscreen.
One of the best effects centres around an orange 'blob' which throws out
small white dots which join up to form a shape. A heavy metal soundtrack
accompanies the demo in glorious stereo. When the effects and soundtrack
finish, the second part of the demo is loaded. A much more relaxed
soundtrack plays here, as the greetings are displayed.
DEM.4418C THE APRIL FOOL DEMO by DNT - Starts off looking like a screen
from a bulletin board with the user entering his ID etc. The demo then loads
up and a cute picture is displayed along with the title April Fool! A zany
soundtrack follows this and some credits are displayed on a nicely animated
screen. Press SPACE to progress to a couple more screens. You are then taken
to a game. It is one of those puzzles where you have to form a complete
picture by moving the squares around. There's a high score table,
instructions, skill levels and you can also call the solution up at any
time. If you press Control + 'C' the Jaguar logo appears and a good sampled
track is loaded.
DEM.4419C & DEM.442OC THE VEXIRIK MEGADEMO by Megadaz of Black Eagle - An
eighteen screen demo written in STOS Basic. The screens contain all the
usual scrollers, graphical effects and music. The vector balls demo is
surprisingly fast for STOS. One of the demos is a jukebox of 13 pieces of
soundchip music. Read the scroller for hints on how to access the three
hidden demos. Quite a good demo for STOS, the only annoying thing is that
you have to remember to have disk 1 in the drive when exiting any screen. By
the way, don't panic when the Draco screen bombs out, it's supposed to!
Needs 1 Meg, NOT TOS 2 upwards.
DEM.4524C DIGITAL WORLD PART II - Another production by ICE for the STE.
This is the followup to DEM.4336C. A small globe of the world spins at the
bottom of the screen while a scroller runs underneath the globe. Whilst all
this is happening, a well composed MOD plays in the background and some
pulsating dots in the middle of the screen appear to try and move to the
tune. STE ONLY.
DEM.4525C FLASHBACK by TCB - This is TCB's last demo on the ST. It is a
rather unique nostalgic experience to say the last. The screen is split into
four parts and each quarter has a different demo running in it. They have
used three screens from the Cuddly Demos and one from the Junk Demo. There's
a great soundtrack (no they didn't try to run four soundtracks
simultaneously!) playing in the background and the customary scroller at the
bottom of the screen. A well produced demo worth getting for the nostalgia
as much as anything else. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.4526 & DEM.4527 THE SYNERGY DEMO by Synergy Developments - The
introduction looks like an acid demo with some very strange music and
words/graphics being displayed on the screen at speed. Once it has finished,
the main menu is loaded. This is rather different as it is a large six sided
cube which moves when you press the cursor keys. Each side represents a demo
screen. The first is a introduction to the coders and their
hobbies/likes/dislikes. This is presented in very slick manner with lots of
buttons to click onto, and text to read. Other sides include a tracker music
player, a credits screen with a difference (as it's a demo itself) and a
game called Crapman (which this game is not!). It is a pacman clone which is
fast and has very good graphics. Regrettably, you have to reset the machine
to exit it! The last two sides of the cube contain two demos which have the
usual graphic and sound effects like scrollers and a space tunnels made from
dots. Overall it's not a bad demo from one off the lesser kown coding groups
and it has a game and tracker player thrown in too.
DEM.4528C THE CALIMER-O DEMO by Oxygene and MJJ Prod - This demo has seven
screens, all of which have plenty of music and scrollers. Two of the screens
contain records (or so the coders inform us). The first of these is called
"sprite record" and contains a record number of large sprites which snake
around the screen. The second screen is called "plots record" and has the
highest number of curve plots on screen. There is a counter on the screen
which shows how near you are to seeing the record set (and so you also know
what you would have to do if you wanted to beat it!). The rest of the
screens have the usual mixture of graphical effects such as vectors, 3D
shapes etc. As with all Oxygenne/MJJ Prod demos, the quality is very high.
DEM.4529C THE FLIPO DEMO by Oxygene and Diamond Designs - A very noisy
introduction kicks this one off. There is no menu, the screens follow each
other one after another. The first effect is a bouncing filled ball which
distorts itself. This is followed by a time tunnel which is made of dots,
through which you are moving at speed. There's cubes with faces on them and
a very clever morphing effect when the demo's title appears and then
explodes into lots of dots which quickly form into shapes. These shapes in
turn then change into different shapes. Other graphical effects include the
coders' names going across the screen rotating within a static window, five
spinning coloured balls, etc. The credits are at the end and use miniature
pictures of what you have just viewed to show who is responsible for what.
This is another great demo from Oxygene and partners Diamond Design.
DEM.4606M MONO MORPHING ANIMATIONS - Two animations of one thing
transforming into another. Both were created using STOS Basic! MEMONKEY -
Watch a monkey's face miraculously change into a man's, or is it the other
way around? ICONOS - There are two 'morphs' on screen at once here. One one
side you have a man's face which is expanding and contracting, much like
someone blowing up a balloon. On the other, you have a man's head morphing
into a woman's. Who said you need true colour to morph! Both animations need
1 Meg.
DEM.4653C THE DING-O DENTRO by Dune - A little Dentro which also doubles up
as Dunes newsletter to the STE owners. The scroller is rather clever in that
as well as appearing over the main part of the screen, there is a flexi-
scroller in the corner, where the text goes around in a circle like a small
wheel. The effects include several big colour circles which mix together to
make other colours. ROTM - This is a standalone version of Sanity's
contribution to "A GRUMBLER IN THE RUTTING SEASON". It consists of a window
on the screen which looks onto a pattern of Atari logos (which changes to
various other shapes). The pattern is then zoomed in and out and rotated
around. There is also a scroller, and some music whilst the computer zooms
in and out of these altering patterns. ZEAL'S ALIVE is a another small demo
which has lots of effects. Alive starts with a starfield effect which
displays the title and the writers' names. The starfield then alters into a
rotating ball which then changes into solid 3D objects. Whilst all these
effects take place, a really good soundtrack plays in the background. It
ends with a scoller which contains the credits and greetings. STE ONLY.
DEM.4687C OH NO MORE FROGGIES by Legacy - The followup to Froggies Over The
Fence. It has all the usual wireframe and dot generated objects as well as
some sine curves. One example is a ball generated from 324O dots which then
moves around the screen. This then changes to shaped curves which appear
to be moving as the dots fade in and out. A wire frame cube appears, with
a moving sine curve inside it. There are also a few pictures of dragons,
monsters and the countryside, all of which use more than sixteen colours.
You will have to wait for the screens to step through at their own rate in
this one. Keep pressing the SPACEBAR to advance and you will see a frog
explode and the Sector One logo appear!
DEM.4793C & DEM.4794C BELIEVE THE MUSIC by Redlite - As the title suggests,
this is a music demo. It starts up with an impressive stereo sample and
some background info on how the demo came to be. The first screen plays a
MOD called "Sooty's Jam". No, this is not a rave tune for the puppet,
but a rather good module played back with a fast scroller. After Sooty's
Jam comes the "New Sound Order". The screen scrolls around a massive picture
of a woman's face as this MOD plays. The last screen features a MOD called
SPACED and you can use the function keys to alter the treble, bass and
volume on this one. The credits are at the end and are accompanied by
another tune. STE ONLY.
DEM.4795C & DEM.4796C THE ELECTION OVERDRIVE DEMO by The Moskavites - A
collection of screens spread over two disks. Everything is written in good
old STOS and there is only one screen which has a scroller (a welcome
relief!). The screens all follow on each other, just press Space to move on.
The only one this doesn't work for is the fractals screen which cannot be
exited (you have to wait until it has finished). One of the screens involves
clicking the mouse over a number of pictures in order to listen to various
pieces of digitised speech. There is also a screen with a sample and picture
of John Major! The rest of the demo has a couple of 512 colour pictures and
a combination of chip and sampled music. Stereo sound can be sent out
through the STE stereo jacks or to a stereo cartridge or via a sampling
cartridge to your Hi-Fi on an STFM. Be ready to swap the disks when
prompted, otherwise the demo will terminate (you don't get long!). This two
disk demo is an example of what is possible with STOS from one of the
smaller coding groups. Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.4797C HIER SINUS NACH ZWE DENTRO by United Forces - This demo title has
to be the most long winded we have seen for a little while. It was written
by various coders at the 1994 United Forces Summer Convention. The
introduction explains all this and uses some nice cartoon type graphics at
the same time. The first of the six screens is 3D spaceship making a trip
through a starfield made up from small bubbles instead of the usual dots.
The second and third screens concentrate mainly on scrollers, including one
which is full screen. Screen four features the greeting and has a hidden
feature but you will have to read all of the text to find it! The text on
this screen is displayed rather cleverly on top of a starfield. The fifth
screen is the disk filler. It has a good sound sample and yes more text,
this time displayed using a different effect. The last screen has a nice
spinning wireframe triangle which changes into a spinning star. The scroller
tells you even more about the convention which you missed. The music on this
last screen is very well done.
DEM.4821C HIMEUR VITREE by The Hemoroids - Like its predecessors, this demo
has a nice foreign sounding name. It starts up with a well drawn picture of
what appears to be an eyeball! The majority of the screens are contained
within the black cinema style borders. There are dot generated patterns and
3D tunnels made up from thousands of dots. There's also a sea effect where
some waves appear with a small hemoroid ship floating across them as the sea
goes up and down. A snow storm with a large Father Christmas in the middle
makes an appearance (this is the only reference to Christmas in the demo)
and there are several other effects such as fast zooming in on a pattern on
the floor. Last but not least are colour-shocked balls which change colours
rapidly as they move up the screen. The general content of this demo is very
good as are most Hemoroids productions, the presentation and musical effects
are equally well done. Please note that this demo will not run on machines
with more than 1 Meg unless you install RECONFIG.PRG on UTL.3226.
DEM.4822C BEYOND DEADLINE by New Core - A lesser know demo crew with a
dentro which dates back to 1993. The screens contain mainly spinning spheres
forming shapes, snakes, etc. There are also some pictures with fractals
added around the borders. One of the ST's older effects, the vertical
rasters with scroller, makes a return in this demo. The upside down screen
is in the words of the coders, what happens when you read Atari Internals
upside down! It features a multiple layer scroller with music. This is the
only major effect which has not appeared in an ST demo recently. However,
having said this, the demo does have some good music and several scrollers
to read (even if it does mean turning the monitor upside down!).
DEM.4823C BIRDIE II by Zeal - A high quality introduction welcomes you to
the latest demo by Zeal. The introduction has some excellent music which
plays throughout the rest of the demo. The demo features fractals which
instead of just standing still, move towards the viewer. There is also a
large ball with spinning lines coming off it. Shapes which are created from
thousands of dots make their usual appearance and later form another 3D dot
generated tunnel. This demo displays one of the fastest flights through a
tunnel of this type. There are also the usual greetings and credits which
appear across the centre of the screen. STE ONLY.
DEM.4824C EXHAUST DEMO by Accs and The End - This is a multi part demo was
coded at the Logissonne Party in 1993. It features several screens all of
which follow on from each other. Effects include shaded bobs and a 3D world
where everything is constructed from wireframe graphics which spin and move
around the screen. The vektorball makes a return, this time bouncing up and
down on a square and then on a patterned floor. There are also snakes formed
from 400 moving dots and light sourced logos which change as a small sun
moves over them. In another rather different screen, the Accs logo changes
into the title "Exhaust" by transfer dots from the bottom of the screen to
the top. There are no scrollers in this demo which is a nice surprise. There
are however, a couple of screens at the end which tell you who did what and
other little bits of gossip. STE ONLY.
DEM.4825C AROMATICA by TSM - Another foreign offering for the ST with all
of the text being non-English! Don't let that put you off, because there are
ten great screens worth seeing. These are accessed by pressing the numeric
keys. The demos include a big scroller, bitplanes scroller, parallax
scrollers and mega pixel scrollers. There is also a scroller on the main
menu which describes all the screens, and music playing in the background
throughout.
DEM.4826C & DEM.4827C FLY TO FLY by The Eagles - Another multipart demo.
Like so many others, you have to go through each screen sequentially as
there is no facility to skip past screens. Effects include dots in space
which form into shapes, vectorballs creating yet more shapes, and keftales.
There are also moving shaded lines and precalculated spinning shapes which
have pictures of a face on their sides. The electronic microscope is a very
clever screen where a molecular breakdown of an atom moves around the
screen. Fly To Fly features lots of original graphics which include pictures
of pigs dressed as ninjas, several pictures of women (fully clothed!) and
other miscellaneous pictures. There is also a tune playing away in the
background all the time. The credits wind up this demo proper but there's
also a reset demo which contains the addresses of the coders.
DEM.4833C & DEM.4834C TALK TALK by Excellence In Art - This demo is
massive with the graphics amounting to 5.4 Meg and 470K of sound data and
was released at the Motorola Inside '93 demo party. It features an original
stereo soundtrack and original graphics, something which is hard to find
nowadays. What's more, both sound and graphics are excellent! Makes uses of
the STE's stereo sound and hardware scrolling capabilities. Needs at least 2
Meg (perhaps the only STE demo which does!). May be installed on a hard
drive. STE ONLY.
DEM.4871C RODENTS DEMO - This demo contains only one screen. It displays a
picture of what appears to be a lion or tiger's face and is so large that it
cannot be displayed in its entirety on screen. Instead, the STE scrolls over
the picture in all directions so the full picture can be seen. This movement
over the picture is accompanied by a scroller and soundchip music. STE ONLY.
DEM.4872C HYDROXID DEMO by Hydroxid - This is an Intermedia 93 production
and contains six screens, two of which are still pictures. The first screen
after the introduction has a picture of a futuristic land and is constructed
from three dimensional shade sprites. These sprites are moving ball-like
things which form patterns on the screen. Then comes a picture of a warrior,
followed by splines (an old effect of lots of dots which move up and down
along a line). The effect may be old but it is very smoothly implemented.
Before the next moving screen, the second still graphic picture appears.
This time it is of a futuristic Adam and Eve. After this the Linerout screen
appears. It contains moving wireframe objects which appear to be constructed
from what looks like fuzzy-type lines. The ever so famous moving ball
constructed from lots of dots is the last but one screen and the final
screen is reserved for the greetings to various other demo coding groups.
DEM.4874C, DEM.4875C, DEM.4876C WHITE SPIRIT by Adrenaline - A three disk
musical extravaganza by Adrenaline. The introduction is an excellent
scrolling city landscape with a row of trees which scroll in front of the
city. There are then several screens of original hand drawn graphics which
introduce the demo. Once the introduction (which uses up the whole of disk
one!) ends, the main menu is loaded. White Spirit contains twelve tunes
which are spread over the other two disks. Use the arrow keys to scroll
through the tune titles, and press INSERT to load your chosen tune. A short
text description is displayed for each tune. Unfortunately this, like all
other text in the demo, is in French. Whilst the tunes are played, there is
either an animated Adrenaline band displayed or a piano. Pressing the
SPACEBAR toggles between the band and the selection screen.
DEM.4924C THE MINDBOMB DEMO by The Lost Boys - Guide the wee man around
using the arrow keys and enter various doors using the space bar to access
the various demos. This demo is the best ever by TLB and took a year to
make! Guest screens from Digital Insanity and others. Is this the demo of
the year. Double sided disk. This disk will not run on STs with more than
1 Meg of memory. Contains a fair amount of bad language. Do not buy this
disk if you are likely to be offended. Formerly part of the BUDGIE UK
range.
DEM.4925C AENIGMATICA'S GENESYS 82 TRACK REMIX DEMO - 6 demos in one use
F1 - F6 to access them. Double sided disk. Contains a fair amount of bad
language. Do not buy this disk if you are likely to be offended. Formerly
part of the BUDGIE UK range.
DEM.4927C SPECTRUM 512 SLIDESHOW by The Supervisors from Poland - 24
fantasy pictures. Most feature nudes so over 16's only. This disk uses its
own display program which loads several pictures into memory and uses
special effects to display the pictures. You can use the display program
for your own slideshows. Formerly part of the Budgie UK range.
DEM.4948 & DEM.4949 THE STOSSER DEMO by Martin Cubitt and Friends - A
two disk selection containing thirteen small demos by regular contributors
to the STOSSER diskzine. Demos include a tracker screen, a demo based around
the Rainbow star, Zippy and a collection of mandlebrots. Other screens have
lots of scrollers, music and graphic effects and all are coded in 100% STOS.
A great example of what you can do with STOS if you really put your mind to
it.
DEM.4981C THE DELIRIUM DEMO by Orbital Software - A six screened STOS demo.
Choose which of these screens you wish to view by using the arrow keys. They
include a colour shock, large moving balls, four scrollers at the same time,
and some chip music which is played along with moving graphic equalisers.
DEM.5060C SYNTHETIC DELIGHTS by MUG UK - A music demo with no less than 120
MOD files composed using 'Synthetic Sounds' on the Amiga. It features mouse
control for easy selected and automatically detects if you have an STE, in
which case the stereo playback routine is used. If you have 2 Megabytes of
memory (or more), all 120 MODs are loaded into memory and the disk is not
accessed between modules. If not, each module is loaded from disk as
required. The disk also includes a module extraction program which will
allow you to extract your favourite MODs from the link file. Yes, there are
120 MODs on this disks! Needs 1 Meg.
DEM.5067C SOCCER KID MUSIC DEMO - MUG UK's back after a long break, with his
STFM only Soccer Kid music demo. The title may ring a bell with PC users, as
its the name of a PC soccer game which is where the tunes, and graphics have
been 'borrowed' from. The tunes allow you to get in the mood for that big
match that you're just going to sit down in front of the box to watch. The
music is very good and there are several tracks to choose from. The main
menu consists of the title screen from the game. Pity the game itself never
made it to the ST! NOT STE.
DEM.5087C ICEHAPPY by ICE - A rather simple but effective STE acid house
sound demo with patterns formed from spinning shapes instead of flashing
smiling faces. XTREAM 94 by Extream - The Extream New Year Intro of 1994. A
great intro with atmospheric sound, falling snow and scrollers all running
simultaneously. STE ONLY.
DEM.5088C BIRDIE II by Zeal - Starts off with moving mandlebrots, spinning
dots in ball/sphere shapes, very fast dot tunnels, real spinning star fields
and lots of scrollers with greetings to all the STE's great coders. The demo
has a catchy soundtrack which plays throughout. However, Birdie II does seem
to end rather abruptly! Needs 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.5089C EXTREME RAGE by Anatomica - This is the very last demo from one
of the greatest STE demo coding groups. After the introductory music,
several sine curves are formed from thousands of dots. These then convert to
other shapes, closely followed by shadebobs forming patterns across the
screen. The old favourite spinning, moving globe makes an appearance and
changes into other shapes. Full screen colourshocks later appear, followed
by multi- coloured wire frame moving objects. The greetings and scrolltext
come in at the end. Needs 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.5174C SUBSTATION by Unique Developments - A playable demo of the STE's
first Doom clone. It's the usual scenario of wandering around a maze
shooting at everything that moves and collecting things. You are armed with
only a dagger and a pistol and must brave the elements and save the world,
or something like that. Gameplay follows much the same lines as the PC
version of Doom but with some compromises. This demo is fully playable but
limited to a single level and it exits to the Desktop each time you lose a
life. Needs 1 Meg. STE ONLY.
DEM.5214C MORPHING DEMO 1 by Martin Cubitt - They said it couldn't be done,
but here it is, morphing on your ST! A collection of 5 short demos where one
screen morphs smoothly into another. The first is a blatant advert for
Floppyshop! Other morphs include a man's face turning into an elephant, a
hotdog turning into a hamburger, a woman turning into a man and a tiger
turning into a koala bear. Really impressive stuff!
DEM.5215C MORPHING DEMO 2 by Martin Cubitt - More of those incredible
morphing demos. This disk's offerings are a Buick logo turning into an Alpha
Romeo logo, a man turning into a dog, a Ferrari logo turning into a Ford
logo, a lion turning into a tiger and a man changing into someone else. You
really must see these demos, they're great!
DEM.5311 THE TYRANNY DEMO by Dead Society - The STE has had many dance
demos and here comes another. This is one of the better house demo available
and features a dance track playing in the background with the screen
displaying people dancing, flashing lights, spinning shapes, balls, grids
etc. Tyranny is one of the better STE demos. If you don't already have one
of the other techno demos, get this one. STE ONLY.
DEM.5336C STEStosSterone - The Demo! - Yes another STOS demo for the STE.
This one is designed as an introduction to the STOS programmers' disk
magazine of the same name. This time you have to pilot a small ship to the
four individual demo screens using a joystick. The landscape over which the
ships flies moves both backwards and forwards. The first screen contains a
sound track and a picture which moves around (as it is bigger than the
screen size). The second and fourth screen are very similar and contain more
sounds. The third screen contains a chap on his flying carpet over the
desert. Great stuff, did somebody say it was written in STOS? STE ONLY.
DEM.5360C BLITTER MANIA by Sedma - Starts off with a spinning Atari
computer before going into lots of other moving solid 3D objects which
include chessboards, helicopters, planes, etc. The demo has a couple of
scrollers, the first of which is made up of 3D letters which come towards
the viewer. The second scroller is near the end and has the credits and
features the greetings appearing on a wall. An excellent example of the
STE's ability to move three dimensional objects. STE ONLY.
DEM.5361C & DEM.5362C CHIPBOXES 1, 2, 3 by Zuul - Between the three
chip box programs there are twenty seven chip music tunes to listen to,
whose combined length is well over two hours twenty minutes. There's a
total of 1858 individual patterns with the compilation running to almost
1400K! Whilst the sound plays there are a few screens of text giving you
some background on the tunes. There's also quite a few packed tunes
(unpacker included) on the disk which are over and above those included in
the demos. Well composed and worth hearing.
DEM.5430C PINBALL ILLUSIONS DEMO by MUG UK - Five excellent pieces of music
from the Amiga game Pinball Dreams, selectable from a main menu. If you have
enough memory (2 Mb or more), everything is loaded into RAM. Fully hard
drive compatible and the music plays in stereo if running on an STE. Needs 1
Mb.
DEM.5446C ULTIMATE MUZAK DEMO VOLUME III by PHF - A collection of digitised
music from some old ST games. The music in this volume (some of which is
multi-part) comes from Giana Sisters, Quick Silva, Stormlord, Turrican,
Turrican II, Warp, Z-Out, Lethal Xcess. Good music and not bad graphics to
go with it.
DEM.5447C ULIMATE MUZAK DEMO VOLUME IV by PHF - One of those old
fashioned demos where you guide an odd looking character around a large
'playing area' visiting various locations, each of which (in this case)
leads to a tape recorder with a different set of tunes. Reminiscent of the
B.I.G. demo but with the emphasis on music rather than sub-demos. Each
pillar in this case takes you into a music zone. Once you enter the music
zone you have control over what looks like a car stereo with several tracks
from a particular game/demo or by a specific musician.
DEM.5448C ULTIMATE MUZAK DEMO VOLUME V by PHF - Another in this series of
Atari music complications. Like the others, it's a case of selecting the
music you want to listen to, from a main menu. If fact there's seven menus
to choose from, each with its own selection of tunes. There's a myriad of
lines which pulsate in time with the music and weird colour cycling effects
accessed by clicking the 'yikes' button! It ends with digitised mugshots of
the PHF team and a long scrolltext.
DEM.5492 AMBITION by Crystalic - A multi screen demo with a guest screen by
Zeal. Select the screen you wish to view by either using the main menu
(which has lots of music and starfields), or the alternative menu (a rather
plain list of screens with no effects being displayed). The screens have all
the effects that you would expect and have some very strange titles like the
Bobo Screen, Always Ultra, Maggot Master and Corny Corner. Corny Corner is
Ambition's very own small game within the demo. It appears to be one of
those games where you have to trap the other player (the computer in this
case) by completing blocks. STE ONLY.
DEM.5493C FAITH by Dune - Another multi-screen demo featuring dot generated
mountains, rotating 3D objects (which include bouncing wireframe cubes half
filled with water), and stars, to name some of the objects. Other effects
include the dot generated time tunnel, 'rubber' vector graphics, solid '4D'
objects cutting through each other and extensive use of flash graphics
throughout. Another worthwhile offering from Dune.
DEM.5648 THE LORDS - A collection of five standalone STOS demos by a French
crew. These demos are more of an advertisement for STOS than anything else
as they demonstrate scrolling text presented in various ways. Well presented
with nice graphics. WILDFIRE DENTRO - A dentro is a small demo and this is
one of the more impressive ones. It features stunning graphics, as well as a
flapping Atari logo created from small different colour balls. The credits
are given using a Star Wars type scroller which is one of the best examples
of this type of scroller to date. Short but sweet and well worth seeing. STE
ONLY.
DEM.5649 NECROMUNDA by Paranoia - Lots of scrolltext with excellent hand
drawn graphics spread over four different sub-demos which are selected from
a main menu. The first, Scientia, contains four digitised tunes, Exicted,
the second screen, has an impressive re-mixed digitised sound sample.
Psychedelika is similar in presentation to Scientia but with four digitised
tunes this time and a different picture, the credits are on the fourth
screen. Good music and graphics, digitised tunes created using Quartet. Runs
on a 520 but you get a few extras on a 1 Mb machine.
DEM.5650 THE CODE A DAY CONVENTION - A chance to see some of the entries to
a demo coding convention held a few years ago. The entries are split across,
modules, boot ups (demos which can fit on a bootsector!) and a 3.5K demo,
all selected from a menu. The four sound modules entries are of an extremely
high quality. The boot disk entries include a couple of mandelbrots and some
other colourful bits and pieces. The 3.5K demo is a spiral pattern which is
generated from the centre of the screen outwards. It 'grows' very slowly,
eventually filling the screen. The final section contains some digitised
pictures of three of the coders pulling faces! Well worth hearing the MODs,
the demos aren't bad either! Needs 1 Mb.
DEM.5839C & DEM.5840C TWELVE DAYS OF CHRISTMAS by Sinbad of Effect - The
first Christmas Demo in years and this one's brimming with all sorts of
everything. As you would expect, the song of the same name is performed
beautifully and accompanied by a slideshow complete with words, just in case
you forget them! There's a slideshow of festive pictures and a music box
which plays snippets from various Christmas favourites. Twelve Days is more
than just a demo, it features lots of Christmas trivia including Merry
Christmas in 33 languages, traditional recipes, Santa FAQ and more! There's
the full transcript of Charles dickens' 'A Christmas Carol' for you to read
or print, a festive fun and jokes section and the lyrics to 14 Christmas
Carols. Loosely described as a "Christmas Hamper on disk"! Please note that
the Twelve Days song is STE ONLY although everything else runs on an FM too.
Needs 1 Mb.
DEM.5866C MAGRATHEA by TSCC - A couple of great intros take you into this
MODule compilation. It starts off with a 'flight' across an undulating
landscape. From here you get a burning embers effect along with some
scrolltext, followed by some information on the forthcoming MODules. Press
ESC to choose the module you wish to listen to. The choices are CHEWING GUN,
MYSTIC LOVE '96, DOUERORGASMUS, RUNNING, SIBIRIAN SUN & WINTERMUTE, all of
which are replayed in glorious stereo using the Sirius PlayeR. Needs 1 Mb.
STE ONLY.
DEM.5972C BLACK AND WHITE DENTRO - The first demo by Acid Maker and Mr
Wrobel. A four screen demo where all the screens are unsurprisingly, in
black and white. That's not entirely true as there's a blue background! The
first contains those famous balls making various patterns over the screen.
Some rather impressive 3D effects here. The second has a spinning ball
constructed from thousands of dots. The third features a scroller which has
hints on how to access the fourth, a hidden screen. There's swearing in the
scroller and the coders seem rather insulting towards everyone, so don't
order this disk if you're likely to be offended.
DEM.5974C THE EUROSWAPS CD SPECIAL INTROS DISK TWO - This is the second
complication disk (we don't have the first) of menu screens used by the
Euroswaps on their various complication disks. The Introductions contain
chip music with scroll text, some have graphic effects, others just a static
picture. It refers to various games being on the disk. Do not be misled,
this is a compilation of the intros only, NOT the games! Doesn't run on 4Mb
machines.
DEM.6110C JAMHOUSE by Unit 17 - An originally composed 8 channel, 25Khz
house mix (using Copson Data's replay routines) from Sweden. Graphics are
nothing spectacular (a logo and pulsating colours is all you get) but this
is one of the better acid house type demos around. STE ONLY. 3.5K MEGADEMO -
A collection of eight sub-demos, each coded in no more than 3.5K. Selectable
from a menu. All were done during the ST News Coding Convention. One is even
a full game! Doesn't run on machines with more than 1Mb.
DEM.6111C TROUZOU 'N INT KET BET KLEUET BEN BREMAN by Adrenaline - The
predecessor to TRAOU'N INT KET BET GRAET BEN BREMAN on DEM.4358C &
DEM.4359C. This is primarily a music demo with eleven pieces (in glorious
stereo) split over two menu screens. While the music is playing, there's a
starfield effect and a lengthy scroller running. Can you find the hidden
screen? Don't forget the reset demo either! Needs 1Mb. STE ONLY.
DEM.6112C MODULE COMPILATION 3 (GOLGAFRINCHAM) by TSCC - Automatically
launches you into a simple two player, joystick controlled shoot 'em up.
Both players play simultaneously and the aim is to achieve a higher score
than your opponent. Exit the game to access the Sirius Player which lets you
listen to four excellent MOD files. Also included is a MOD file packer
program. STE ONLY.
DEM.6113C DETONATORS by DNS - Starts off with various spinning 3D wireframe
objects which reflect onto and pass through water. Some even appear to
"dance" to the music. This is followed by various rather clever, highly
graphical scrollers. It ends with a picture of the programmer's Desktop!
Excellent music plays throughout.
DEM.6114C HEADACHE PROJECT by Trauma and Empty Head - Created at the
Demobit 95 Party in Bratislavia. Excellent introduction with morphing
instead of the usual scroller. Between the screens, an animated wireframe
bridge (pseudo-tunnel effect) appears. The screens include
squashing/expanding pictures, chip music, scrollers, balls, excellent
graphics and sound. An originally designed and very well presented demo.
DEM.6116C EXTASIA DEMO - After a lengthy loading time, during which some
excellent music is played, you are greeted by a digitised picture of a
female face. This is then replaced by solid 3D spinning objects, then a
fractal scroller. A well presented demo, pity it's so short. STE ONLY.
DEM.6118C COREFLAKES by New Core - When this demo loads, the first thing
you see is a chap watching his TV. It seems he is watching MTV, the TV shows
an advert for coke then you see someone being sick down the toilet! The demo
screens then follow. They all contain scrolling text in various fonts using
different effects. There's wireframe graphics and starfield effects which
form objects and patterns and a fireworks display on the final screen.
Another well presented demo with a clever introduction. Needs 1Mb.
****************************************************************************