Classic Elite

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Revision as of 14:14, 23 March 2021 by Cholmondely (talk | contribs) (Added in Firebird)
Elite
Elite plaincover.jpg
Developer Ian Bell
David Braben
Publisher Acornsoft
Firebird
Torus
Microprose
Telecomsoft
Hybrid
Latest version Elite
Elite Plus
ArcElite
Release date(s) 1984
Platform(s) BBC Micro
Acorn Electron
Commodore 64
Sinclair ZX Spectrum
Amstrad CPC
Apple ][
IBM PC
Atari ST
Amiga
MSX
Tatung Einstein
NES
Acorn Archimedes
The original game box
Start-up screen for Classic Elite on BBC micro, Disk version (1984)
Firebird's quite original Elite ads as seen in Zzap!64
Elite's creators at the time of launch in 1984: the youngsters David Braben and Ian Bell


Elite is a seminal space trading computer game, originally published by Acornsoft in 1984 for the BBC Micro and Acorn Electron computers and subsequently ported to many others. The game's title derives from one of the player's goals to raise their combat rating from Harmless, through Mostly Harmless, Poor, Average, Above Average, Competent, Dangerous, Deadly, before reaching the exalted heights of Elite.

The BBC version of the game originally came on cassette in a box - on the top left there is a photograph of the front and back. The box contained:

  • the cassette with the game on it.
  • instructions on loading the game.
  • a strip of card to place above the red function keys on the BBC Micro explaining their role in game (Launch/Buy Cargo/Equip Ship/Long range chart etc).
  • a wall chart for identifying ships.
  • The Space Traders Flight Training Manual.
  • a copy of The Dark Wheel novella.
  • a postcard for posting back to Acornsoft when one reached Elite status, so that they could send one a special badge!
  • The Elite Player's Guide was authored by Bell and Braben but did not make it into the box.

The player initially controls "Commander Jameson" and starts at the Lave orbital space station with 100 credits and a lightly armed Cobra Mark III. Most of the ships that the player encounters are named after snakes or other reptiles. Credits can be accumulated through piracy, trade, military missions, bounty hunting and asteroid mining. This money allows the player to upgrade the ship with improved weapons, a larger cargo hold, an automated docking system, an extra energy bank and more.

The later non-BBC ports of the game variously added new ships, more colour, replaced Dark Wheel with Imprint, etc.

Comment

I think a lot of it is due to the imagination factor...

Years ago (in the early 90s) the topic of Elite came up at a party. We'd been talking about computer games and etc, and a few people had played Elite. But some of the things they remembered were odd, in that I'm fairly sure they didn't actually exist in any form of Elite. They'd all played it before, but I was making my first runs at that time. I'm not one of the people who played Elite when it first came out, I couldn't afford a computer then. I was playing the DOS version on a Radio Shack computer that was not quite as good as a 286. LOL

Anyway, one of them talked about how he'd often been boarded by "the vipers" and inspected for contraband. Some others agreed it sucked when that happened. One recalled, in some detail, a mission where he was carrying some special sort of missile and it malfunctioned while onboard his ship and had to be defused, which involved figuring out some sort of numeric code. Another recalled having gotten her engines and shields upgraded as a result of an encounter with friendly aliens. Alien ships flying in large geometric formations before they'd break to attack. An alien homeworld or secret base. Having a wingman/partner that flew along and occasionally advised. Emergency missions running a special load of vaccine to worlds having plagues. Struggling to avoid falling into a black hole. Intercepting messages that had to be decoded in some way. Seeing the wreckage of your own ship if you restarted and then later found exactly the same spot where you'd been shot down.

At the time, I wasn't far into the game, so all this sounded plausible enough. I just nodded and figured it was out there somewhere and I'd find it eventually. One thing they agreed on was that Elite was the greatest spacegame of all time, far better than others I'd played at that time, like Starflight or Wing Commander. Oh, the graphics and etc were "old school", but there was agreement that it was by far the best game.

While there might have been some alcohol-inspired exaggeration in some cases, I don't think they were trying to intentionally BS me so much as that they actually *did* remember the game that way. In some cases, I think it likely they mis-remembered features of other games as being somewhere in Elite. In other cases, I think that the universe and adventures that they imagined, the "game in the head", superseded reality and they recalled the game as being much more than it actually was.

That's one of the qualities of a legend though, isn't it? When a thing is remembered as perhaps greater and more wonderful than it actually was. Not many other games result in as many "tall tales" as Elite.

One thing they agreed on, though, was that it wasn't like most other games. You could just get in your ship and go.. and keep going. There was nothing you *had* to do or accomplish, and you could just go forever, bumming along through space and seeing what wonders you could find. Kind of a "Holy Grail" of games, the game that never had to end. So I'm pretty sure they actually played it and weren't just BS-ing. For all the odd things that aren't in the game that some of them were sure they remembered, not a one of them ever claimed to see a "game over" other than in the personal sense of "press space".

(Ganelon 2011)

The authors

For the time (1983) it was relatively unusual to have more than one author for a game, but David Braben and Ian Bell realized they were working on similar projects and collaborated whilst undergraduates at the University of Cambridge to produce Elite.

There are two excellent stories of the original elite: the first concerns how the enterprising duo were able to cram the game into 32k of memory. The second concerns their difficulties in finding a publisher for it.

See how David Braben and Ian Bell created Elite, by watching the documentary Brits Who Made The Modern World.

Firebird

Bell & Braben also signed another contract with Firebird (part of British Telecom, until bought out by Microprose in 1989) for porting to other computer systems. Firebird developed the famous ads seen above.

See also


Links

Elite sites

Most of the various Elite sites have foundered over the decades. These still worked in Dec 2020:

History of Elite sites

  • Part of the book by Thomas Spufford who did the TV show on the making of Elite
  • New Film on History of Elite by Kim Justice (2019).

Dramatic Side of Elite

Sartorial Side of Elite