Skool Disassemblies 20100723
A new release of the Skool Disassemblies is available.
To see, get, use or enjoy the new release, you have three options:
If you don't yet know, the Skool Disassemblies are fully documented disassemblies of Skool Daze and Back to Skool, with extras such as lists of bugs, pokes, and trivia. So if you've ever had the urge to fix up, mod or discover the inner workings of the Skool games, the Skool Disassemblies should be on your bookshelf (as it were, and if I do say so myself).
If you're seriously into tinkering with the Skool games, then SkoolKit is your best option, because it can build ASM versions of the disassemblies as well as the HTML versions. The ASM versions can be fed into an assembler (such as pasmo). SkoolKit also includes a disassembler that can assist in creating HTML and ASM disassemblies of other Spectrum games; to demonstrate this, an incomplete, work-in-progress disassembly of Contact Sam Cruise is included.
If, on the other hand, you're already familiar with the Skool Disassemblies, then you'll probably just want to check the changelog. Go for it.
To see, get, use or enjoy the new release, you have three options:
- browse it online
- download a copy for offline viewing
- download SkoolKit and build your own copy
If you don't yet know, the Skool Disassemblies are fully documented disassemblies of Skool Daze and Back to Skool, with extras such as lists of bugs, pokes, and trivia. So if you've ever had the urge to fix up, mod or discover the inner workings of the Skool games, the Skool Disassemblies should be on your bookshelf (as it were, and if I do say so myself).
If you're seriously into tinkering with the Skool games, then SkoolKit is your best option, because it can build ASM versions of the disassemblies as well as the HTML versions. The ASM versions can be fed into an assembler (such as pasmo). SkoolKit also includes a disassembler that can assist in creating HTML and ASM disassemblies of other Spectrum games; to demonstrate this, an incomplete, work-in-progress disassembly of Contact Sam Cruise is included.
If, on the other hand, you're already familiar with the Skool Disassemblies, then you'll probably just want to check the changelog. Go for it.
Post edited by SkoolKid on
Comments
I really wish that the Skooldaze style genre had caught on commercially, and (good) versions had appeared for the 16-bits and further. Instead we get endless Call of Duty/FIFA/Wii Sports style games, but a modern version of Skooldaze could be amazing. We could have a full Greyfriars (Billy Bunter's school) to explore and interact with. It'd probably be in 3D, to please the marketing men (and the people who only buy games with outstanding graphics), but it might work very well.
Please let us know of anything else you find, it really makes for interesting reading.
The only other Skool Daze-inspired games I know of besides Klass of 99 are the 'mods' that come with Pyskool: Skool Daze Take Too, Ezad Looks, and Back to Skool Daze. They are simple rearrangements of the original skool games rather than completely new ones, I suppose, but still better than nothing. </plug> :)
Pyskool - a remake of Skool Daze and Back to Skool
I've always thought that Bully is like a modern day version of Skooldaze...