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The Dizzy series of computer games, published by Codemasters, was one of the most successful European computer game brands of the late 1980s. The games were based around a central figure: an intelligent egg-like creature called Dizzy. The games would typically involve Dizzy trying to save his friends and family the Yolkfolk, often from the schemes of his arch nemesis, the evil wizard Zaks. Most of the games in the series were platform games, with an emphasis on puzzle solving, similar to graphic adventures. Dizzy would roam around various fairytale-like locations, collecting objects, interacting with other characters, and solving logical puzzles. Rather than jumping in the conventional platform-game way, Dizzy would somersault and roll around the landscape; hence the name "Dizzy". The eight games which follow this style, usually referred to as the arcade adventures, are considered the 'core' games in the series; however, several spin-off titles were released, including Fast Food Dizzy, Kwik Snax and Dizzy Down the Rapids.
[edit] DevelopmentDizzy was created by the Oliver Twins (who later formed Interactive Studios). The Oliver Twins left the series after Fantasy World Dizzy, and the remaining games were developed by Big Red Software. The first game in the series, called Dizzy - The Ultimate Cartoon Adventure, was released in June 1986. At this point, Dizzy was not specifically intended to be an egg; the shape had been chosen because it was easy to rotate and animate. The Yolkfolk characters were not introduced until the third game, Fantasy World Dizzy. The earlier games were all programmed primarily for the Amstrad CPC and ZX Spectrum, with most of the games converted for the Commodore 64, Atari ST and Amiga at various stages. A few games were also converted for the NES, Mega Drive, Game Gear, and DOS. Some were unofficially ported to the Russian Electronics BK-0010 and Radio 86RK. [edit] Games in the series[edit] Core series1986 1987 1989 1990 1991 1992 [edit] Spin-Off gamesThese are games which feature Dizzy but have puzzle or action oriented gameplay which is substantially different from that of the main series. 1987 1990 1991 1993 [edit] Compilations1992
1993
This compilation (available on the Sega Master System and Game Gear) was originally intended to include the 9th game in the core Dizzy series, Wonderland Dizzy. However the Codemasters marketing team were unhappy with the idea of two similar games in the same package, and it was decided that since Dizzy The Adventurer (a renamed Dizzy: Prince Of The Yolkfolk) was already almost completed and was generally agreed to be the better of the two games then it should be the one included. Following this decision work on Wonderland Dizzy was effectively halted. Wonderland Dizzy's place in the compilation was taken by a conversion of Dizzy Panic. The third game in the pack was Go! Dizzy Go!, an action-oriented game which had not been previously released. [edit] Games available on cover tapes/disks1986
1987
1988
1990
1994
[edit] Unreleased games
[edit] Parody games
This game featured similar gameplay to the Dizzy series (although the game was much shorter) and stars Giddy, an egg very much like Dizzy except that rather than wear boxing gloves he simply had very large hands. There was a sequel, Giddy 2, also on Amiga, and a third game, Giddy 3, made in 2000 for DOS, then ported in February 2009 to Windows, Mac OSX, Wii, AmigaOS 4 and MorphOS. [edit] The YolkfolkThe yolkfolk were the egg characters who make up Dizzy's friends and family, and as such were the main characters in the series.
[edit] The future Blitz Games artists experimenting with the feel of a possible dizzy game. The Oliver twins and Codemasters who both own 50% of the intellectual property have expressed interest in resurrecting the series, although the twins concede;
The Oliver twins's software company, Blitz Games (with the permission of Codemasters) have experimented with their artists to demonstrate what the Dizzy series might look and feel like if revisited and produced a one minute video clip with an online petition to see if there was consumer interest. The online petition has recently been moved to www.yolkfolk.com. The creators have also expressed interest in re-releasing the existing titles to handheld platforms such as mobile phones. [edit] Fan Created GamesThrough the biggest Dizzy themed fan website, www.yolkfolk.com, the Oliver Twins have explicitly stated that they will normally tolerate fan created games based on the Dizzy franchise that are made freely available, respect the brand and include a prescribed license message. Yolkfolk.com offer hosting for such remakes and have a comprehensive list of them on their site. Although Codemasters have not spoken about their approach to the property, other than not to allow free distribution of the genuine titles, and Blitz make clear that they do not consider their statement a definitive or binding legal text this has led to a comparatively high number of fan titles for the Dizzy series. [edit] See alsoSeymour series, a similar franchise, also from Codemasters. [edit] References
[edit] External links
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