Welcome to the first version of RML-Amiga! This initial release features a whopping 214 stone-cold classics for the intelligent gamer, including:
- All Delphine, Horrorsoft/Adventure Soft, ICOM, Magnetic Scrolls, Lucasfilm/LucasArts, Revolution adventures that were released on the Amiga.
- All Interplay Amiga releases (their early adventures, The Bard’s Tale series, Dragon Wars, Neuromancer, etc.)
- Iconic strategy titles and action/strategy hybrids such as SimCity, Lemmings, Pirates!, Populous, Powermonger, Cannon Fodder, Midwinter, The Settlers, The Perfect General, and several others.
- 100% working uncracked originals of Dungeon Master (v2.2 and v3.60), Chaos Strikes Back, and Fate: Gates of Dawn which are notorious for their elaborate copy protections.
- The entire Amiga SSI Gold Box catalog.
- The original OCS/ECS versions of Eye of the Beholder I & II and their fan-made AGA remakes. These are the definitive versions as they combine the 256-colour VGA graphics of the PC originals with the superior sound of the Amiga ports.
- Many other RPGs that are either Amiga-exclusives (Perihelion, Amberstar, Black Crypt) or are best on the Amiga (Legend of Faerghail, Ambermoon, Captive, Knightmare, Moonstone: A Hard Day’s Knight, Starflight, Ishar series, etc.)
- All AGI and SCI0 Sierra adventures (everything except for the questionable VGA ports), with optional Roland MT-32 sound in the few games that support it.
- All 34 Incofom text adventures with all supplementary materials (that’s every Infocom text adventure except for Border Zone that never had an Amiga release).
- A good selection of Cinemaware classics (Defender of the Crown, Lords of the Rising Sun, and It Came from the Desert I & II).
- Arguably the best-looking version of Elite classic.
- All Freescape games by Incentive (Driller, Dark Side, Total Eclipse, Castle Master I & II).
- A handful of action game favourites (Pinball Dreams, Agony, Shadow of the Beast, Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe, IK+, etc.)
And a lot more—check out the full games list! Of course, all games come with manuals, code wheels, hint books, posters, box cover scans, and all sorts of other supplementary materials to enjoy the games to the fullest.
About 70% of the titles run from an emulated hard drive. The remaining 30% are floppy games that require either no or only very minimal disk swapping.