[go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

Don Priestley

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Don Priestley (born 1940) is a teacher and former video game programmer who wrote over 20 commercial games for the ZX81 and ZX Spectrum home computers between 1982 and 1989. Despite successful releases for DK'Tronics, such as 3D Tanx and Maziacs, Priestley returned to teaching in the late 1980s, claiming changes in the video game industry did not suit his style of work.

Game development

[edit]

Until 1979, Don Priestley was a teacher. In 1981 both he and his son enrolled in a Pascal course at night school. Although his son dropped out, he carried on. One of his early programs was an adaptation of Conway's Game of Life which was converted to a newly purchased Sinclair ZX81.

His first commercial game was The Damsel and the Beast, inspired by a program called Mugwump and published by Bug-Byte.[1] Further ZX81 games written freelance were Dictator (a successful strategy game later ported to the Spectrum)[1] and Mazogs (which was later rewritten for the Spectrum as Maziacs).[2]

Priestley joined DK'Tronics as a director in March 1983.[3] There he developed 3D Tanx, which was critically well-received and his most successful game. It sold around 5000 copies per month for 15 months.[4] This was followed by Spawn of Evil[5] which reached the top of the charts in May 1983.[6] He also wrote Popeye for DK'Tronics. Released in 1985, its point of differentiation was having huge, colourful sprites; amongst the largest seen on the Spectrum.[7][8] This distinct graphical style happened by chance:

The licensors, King Features - were at pains to point out that any game had to include fair representations of the central cartoon characters, so I sat down with a large grid and came up with a figure of Popeye which was seven characters high and six wide - 42 characters to move for each frame!

— Don Priestley, CRASH #34[3]

In 1986, Macmillan Publishers re-released Popeye and approached[1] Priestley to use the same techniques on a launch title[9] for its new label, Piranha Software. The Trap Door, based on the animated series of the same name, won multiple awards[10][11][12] from the press and has been described as one of the best games ever released for the ZX Spectrum.[13][14]

Priestley would go on to use the same style in the sequel Through The Trapdoor (1987), Flunky (1987) and Gregory Loses his Clock (1989) but by the late eighties, Priestley felt that games development was moving away from single developers to team development. These changes did not suit Priestley's style of work and he left the games industry to return to teaching.[4]

Games

[edit]

Sinclair ZX81

[edit]
  • The Damsel and the Beast (1981, Bug-Byte)
  • Mission of the Deep (1981, Macronics)
  • Dictator (1982, Bug-Byte)
  • Sabotage (1982, Macronics)
  • City Patrol (1982, Macronics)
  • Mazogs (1982, Bug Byte)

ZX Spectrum

[edit]
  • 3D Tanx (1982, DK'Tronics)
  • Meteoroids (1982, DK'Tronics)
  • Dictator (1983, DK'Tronics)
  • Maziacs (1983, DK'Tronics)
  • Jumbly (1983, DK'Tronics)
  • Spawn of Evil (1983, DK'Tronics)
  • Minder (1985, DK'Tronics)
  • Popeye (1985, DK'Tronics)
  • Benny Hill's Madcap Chase (1985, DK'Tronics)
  • The Trap Door (1986, Piranha Software)
  • Flunky (1987, Piranha Software)
  • Through the Trap Door (1987, Piranha Software)
  • Target (1988, Summit Software)
  • Up for Grabs (1988, Summit Software)
  • Gregory Loses His Clock (1989, Mastertronic)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Phil South (July 1987). "King Berk". Your Sinclair. No. 19. Dennis Publishing. p. 41. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  2. ^ "Full Colour". Popular Computing Weekly. No. 35. Sunshine Publications. 1 September 1983. p. 46. Retrieved 23 July 2021.
  3. ^ a b "Terry, Arfur and 'Im Upstairs". Crash. No. 34. Newsfield. November 1986. p. 108. Retrieved 23 July 2021.
  4. ^ a b Darran Jones (February 2005), "Retrospective: Don Priestley", gamesTM (28): 154–155
  5. ^ "Evil Tactics". Popular Computing Weekly. No. 20. Sunshine Publications. 19 May 1983. p. 50. Retrieved 23 July 2021.
  6. ^ "Top 10". Popular Computing Weekly. No. 20. Sunshine Publications. 19 May 1983. p. 51. Retrieved 23 July 2021.
  7. ^ Popeye review from CRASH issue 20, September 1985; retrieved from CRASH The Online Edition
  8. ^ Popeye review from Your Spectrum issue 19, October 1985
  9. ^ "A New Label With Bite". Crash. No. 32. Newsfield. September 1986. p. 96. Retrieved 13 July 2021.
  10. ^ "Trap Door, C+VG Hit". Computer and Video Games. No. 61. EMAP. November 1986. p. 39. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  11. ^ "Trapdoor, Sinclair User Classic". Sinclair User. No. 54. EMAP. September 1986. p. 49. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  12. ^ "The Trap Door, Monster Hit". ZX Computing. No. 31. Argus. November 1986. p. 54. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  13. ^ "You Stupid Berk! The Trap Door". Your Sinclair. No. 10. Sportscene Specialist Press. October 1986. p. 62. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
  14. ^ Dan Whitehead (2016). The Trap Door. The Zebra Partnership. p. 183. It's not only one of the best licensed games on the Spectrum but one of the best games, full stop. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
[edit]