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ADAM Software A-Z Catalog
Browse all 104 titles alphabetically — the complete Coleco ADAM software archive
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Showing 7 titles starting with "B"
DDP (Data Pack)
Floppy Disk
Cartridge
Cassette
EPROM
B 7 titles
Ballyhoo
Ballyhoo
INFOCOM
Infocom text adventure game. Disk contains 80 column version as well as one formatted for ADAM''s screen.
DISKDDP Games
Black Dungeon of Midor
Black Dungeon of Midor
ADAMAGIC
Role-playing game for the ADAM. Requires two disks.
DISK Game
Blind Date
Blind Date
ADAMAGIC
An X-Rated text adventure game.
DISK 1987 Game
Boot Shop v1.1, The
Boot Shop v1.1, The
ADAMAGIC
Program for designing pictures that will boot when you load your Disk/DDP.
DISK Utilities
Bradford
Bradford
AARON CONTORER
Bradford is a text formatting and printing utility developed in the 1980s by Aaron Contorer for enhancing output on dot-matrix printers, enabling near-letter-quality (NLQ) text production through graphics-mode rendering and multiple passes per line.[1] Designed primarily for CP/M operating systems, with later versions available for MS-DOS, it processes text files from various editors by interpreting embedded formatting commands to apply fonts, spacing, and styles.[1][2] The program supported a range of printers, including Epson FX/RX and MX models with Graftrax, Gemini 10/15X, and IBM dot-matrix printers, but was incompatible with Okidata models.[1] Key features included eight built-in fonts—such as Typewriter (with serifs), Modern (squared lines), and Vanilla (rounded sans-serif)—with options for mixing fonts on a page, adjustable character widths from 1/20th to 5/20ths of an inch, boldface in three intensities, underlining, italics, and support for proportional or fixed spacing.[1] Users embedded commands (similar to WordStar's, like ^B for bold or ^S for underline) directly in text files, with customizable command characters for compatibility across editors; additional capabilities encompassed margins, page numbering, line centering, full justification, and integration with graphics tools like PrintMaster.[1] Bradford operated interactively, prompting users through about 16 setup questions per run (e.g., printer type, file selection, font choice) without an installation process, and included a draft mode for faster printing alongside its slower NLQ mode (e.g., approximately 14 minutes for two pages on a Gemini 10X).[1] It came with Bradcon, a companion font-editing tool for customizing characters, and was distributed as public domain software with basic instructions, though a $15 manual was required for advanced features like multi-font lines.[1][2] Initially sold commercially by Contorer's firm, Concom Enterprises, for $39 plus shipping, it transitioned to shareware-like distribution, earning praise in 1980s computing newsletters for its versatility and affordability compared to daisy-wheel alternatives.[1] Limitations included no mid-setup cancellation, rough italics in larger sizes, and visible dots in curved fonts, but it handled errors gracefully without aborting prints.[1]
DISK
Brain Games
Brain Games
ADAMAGIC
Five games for the ADAM Computer from ADAMagic software.
DISK Games
Bruce Lee
Bruce Lee
TELEMETRY SOFTWARE
The plot involves the eponymous martial artist advancing from chamber to chamber in a wizard's tower, seeking to claim infinite wealth and the secret of immortality. There are twenty chambers, each represented by a single screen with platforms and ladders. To progress, the player must collect a number of lanterns suspended from various points in the chamber. Most chambers are guarded by two mobile enemies; The Ninja, who attacks with a "bokken stick"[8] and The Green Yamo, a large unarmed warrior, visually styled as a sumo wrestler but attacking with punches and "crushing kicks". On platforms with sufficient graphics support, Yamo's skin is actually pictured as green, though in cover art he has a natural human skin tone. A multiplayer mode allows a second player to control Yamo, or to allow two players to alternately control Bruce. If the player playing Yamo is inactive for a certain time, the computer takes over. The Ninja and Yamo are also vulnerable to the screen's dangers, but have infinite lives so they always return; whereas Yamo is consistently identified as a single person, one version of the manual implies that each reappearance of the ninja is a new individual, replacing the previous one.
DDPDISK 2024 Game