A Speccy Port or Spectrum port is the name given to a game which has been converted directly from the Sinclair Spectrum with little or no changes to the Amstrad CPC. Often the Amstrad version ended up fairing worse than the original Spectrum version (though some games actually ended up pretty decent).
Why ?
The ZX Spectrum shared the same CPU as the Amstrad and had a simple graphics display. The Spectrum was very popular with the Amstrad having a much smaller market share.
To save on time and money, the Spectrum code was re-used.
The Amstrad screen was reduced in size to match the Spectrum's and often most of the colour was removed. Most spectrum ports were done in Video Mode 1 (4 colour mode), because the resolution of this mode matched the resolution of the Spectrum, and this allowed the use of the same graphics.
Speccy ports were also seen on the MSX and Enterprise.
Most of them got their graphic totally unchanged, displaying some kind of colour attributes "artefacts", proof of the faulty portage.
A typical Spectrum port to the Amstrad is said to have been done in 3 days.
Games Cross development
Serious games companies often released their games on multiple Games Platforms (Computers or Consoles).
Many aimed mostly at their home market, as their presence in Europe and overseas markets wasn't well established at the time, leading to different priorities:
As British Market was dominated by Speccy, the CPC had to deal with more Speccy ports than needed. But in a country such as France or Spain where the CPC was the dominant 8-bit machine, developpers used different method.
Often an Atari ST was used for Cross Development in France.
More info at Games Crossdev.
Consequences
The Amstrad CPC was one of the best 8-bit computers of his time in term of graphical capabilities. But this had a price...well, a weight in term of CPU ressources. As so many games were ported from the "inferior" Spectrum, the Amstrad range could hardly benefit from its main advantage.
Quite disapointing, when you are the happy possessor of a "powerful" Amstrad CPC 6128...with a fast disc drive and 2x64KB of Ram, a good colour palette of 27 shades... to get a games designed for a cassette 48KB almost mono-colour computer, and not that compatible in fact...
As a result, so many games were slower, painfully animated, with a bad gameplay... AND had badly ported graphics too.
- C64 had better sounds, scrollings and sprites capabilities.
- Spectrum had less power taken by Video RAM, so could handle animation or scrolling more easily, with less need to precisely program with exceptional care.
Amstrad had to be specifically programmed in order to get good animations. Yet Speccy ports weren't re-programmed in such way. Also, even graphical data were larger than their Speccy's counterpart...
Also, games in Mode 1 could have been good despite the lack of colours...if only those colours were used properly more often.
As a result, most Speccy and C64 fans rarely give Amstrad the credit it deserves.
On a more positive tone, those speccy ports had the merit to exist, or else Amstrad may have a lighter games catalogue.
And as said above, those games weren't all bad, just a bit frustrating most of time.
Games with no need of scrollings and with re-coded graphics actually could be good...
It is also a misconception to believe the screen was downsized in those games to gain processor resources... It was only done to use the Speccy graphics more easily, and we can doubt the code was (re-)designed so such a screen reduction would even gain CPU resources.
Examples
- PacMania
Typical exemple, yet it managed to be a nice game despite this.
The title screen and HUD show the attributes and were almost completly unchanged, yet with less colours on screen than the Speccy version.
Ironically, the game manages to display 6 colours in the 4 colours Mode1... Yet the game's area remains completely monocolour (coded in 1 bit) and "colour attributes artefacts" are still present..
- Head over heels
On the other hand, this one was the prime exemple of what every speccy port should have been. Even the C64 version was totally like the Speccy version (monocolor game's area) while the Amstrad graphics were perfectly recoloured to use so well the lack of colour attributes. Also as this games didn't need scrollings, the animation was almost as good as in other 8 bit versions, and colour palette often changed inks, to actually get a colourfull feeling all along the game.. Head Over Heels
- Black Tiger : Bad, bad, bad, such a shame as the Arcade game was awesome.
- R-Type : disapointing, yet decent.
- Deflektor : exemple of a good speccy "cross development", thanks to a clever concept.
the killer-list of the infamous speccy ports of death
Computer originals Hits (most of them ended up being decent) :
- H.A.T.E
- Highway encounter
- Lotus turbo Esprit challenge
- Fighting Warrior
- Vendetta
- Hard Drivin'
I wouldn't count the numerous CodeMaster or Hewson games... Many of them were cheap budget Speccy games to start with, and where quite well ported or remained good...
Well known franchises :
- Scooby Doo
- Thundercats.
- MASK 3 : Venom Strike Back
- Airwolf 2
Adult games (sort of)
- Sabrina
- Samantha fox strip poker.
- Strip poker II
Movie Franchises :
- Indianna Jones 3 action game.
- Back to the future 2 (half parts were straight speccyporked)
Arcade hits :
- R-Type
- PacMania
- Salamander
- Dragon Breed
- Scramble spirit
- Black Tiger
- Strider
- Bionic Commando
- SuperWonderboy
- Double Dragon3
- Super Hang-On
- Enduro Racer
- Toobin
- Xybots
- Pit fighter
- Cabal
- Street Fighter
Special Category of Death :
- Shadow of the beast
- Myth, history in the making (grrrrr).
- Gauntlet 3
- SWIV
The Blue games of Death :
- The untouchables
- Heroquest
- Hudson Hawk
The infamous killer list of the shamefull 30 speccy porks of death that killed the Amstrad CPC :
- Shadow of the beast
- Myth, history in the making
- Gauntlet 3
- SWIV
- R-Type
- PacMania
- Salamander
- Dragon Breed
- Scramble spirit
- Black Tiger
- Strider
- Bionic Commando
- SuperWonderboy
- Double Dragon3
- Super Hang-On
- Enduro Racer
- Toobin
- Xybots
- Pit fighter
- Cabal
- Scooby Doo
- Thundercats.
- Venom Strike Back
- Sabrina
- Samantha fox strip poker.
- Strip Poker II
- Airwolf 2
- Indianna Jones 3 action game.
- Back to the future 2
- Vendetta
The 3 levels of Speccy portages
Of course the level of Fail could greatly depend on whatever strategy the programmers/graphists used to get rid of the poor Video speccy's specificities for the original game...
A monochrome game could remain monochrome or be recoloured on CPC... or only parts of it (only sprites or Tiles but not both... mostly only sprites.)
A coloured game with design-wise graphics (character based design) could be the exact same yet with even less colours...
Or Tiles/sprites could simply be completely well re-done/re-drawn, even in Mode 0 sometimes...
Rushed and Lazy
The game is exactly as on speccy, even displaying graphical artifacts as Colour attributes, and/or monochrome display for the game's window (a shame on a computer told as Colour Personnal Computer) but not always the HUD, which may even often feature extra colours thanks to Raster colour changes, yet this doesn't really help to see what happens on the game's window.
Also sprites may display Transparency/translucency with background's colour, a typical speccy "Feature" ("not a bug, a feature"... sic...).
Probably achieved by using the almost exact Speccy code and emulating the Speccy specificities (Attributes) on CPC.
It is to notice that it wasn't especially the Programmer's fault, the Game Companies were ordering them to do so... Coders weren't "lazy", it was the Company investment which was lazy...
Examples :
- Black Tiger : monochrome game with multicoloured HUD.
- PacMania : same as Black Tiger, yet even displaying Attributes artifacts/remains.
- Super HanG on : graphics Transparency/translucency
- Enduro Racer : same as Super Hang On, even more displayed as Sprites more often cross the different coloured parts of the screen (while jumping).
- Bionic Commando : there is even inverted/negative coloured sprites.
- Sabrina : same as Bionic commando...
- Gauntlet 3 : HUD is properly recoloured (3 shades) but in-game window is monochrome...(1bit coded sprites and tiles)
- R-type : Monochrome background while sprites still are "coloured" as with Colour attributes, hence even featuring less colours than original speccy game, while the entire screen still display more than the only 4 Mode1 colours...(HUD raster trick...)
This game was done in 3 weeks by only one man, who simply emulated the speccy stuff on CPC (couldn't do better in 3 weeks). Thank god the speccy version was so good this game is still decent on CPC.
Some of those games were still good, as they were yet very good on Speccy, the Amstrad Portage wasn't enough to waste it. But those remained inferior to their original Speccy counterpart (which was often smoother or faster...).
Semi-lazy
Well redone graphically, but not always as would actually be needed.
Such a waste.
Examples :
- HeroQuest : still has monochrome feeling (2 blue shades being used) while actually being properly 2 bit re-coded... Ditherings use 3 colours gradiants instead of the Speccy's 2, and the grey add a bit more colour feeling...sort of ... but it fails due to a poor colour strategy.
- Strider has recoloured sprites, displaying no attributes, but Backgrounds remains monochrome, yet the HUD trick enable a 6 colours display on screen.
- Shadow of the Beast : (perhaps...) No real 3-4 coloured ditherings or even "additional colours" thanks to dithering the 2 medium colours together in many graphics (Exteriors or for many sprites), yet the square speccy attributes are not displayed, while the speccy version remains monochrome (in game window, not HUD) in order to simply advert Colour clashes. Would have needed a few more development time perhaps.
Good Job
Graphics, despite sharing a common ancestry, are well redone, and take into account the Amstrad power.
After all, despite being slower, this is not an excuse to get the same awful looking graphics...
Sometimes those games are not that well "ported", yet its concept and gameplay is such that this is not That important, the game is simply too good to be wasted by such detail as the use of Mode1, and it was still sufficiently re-done.
- Head over heels : no attributes and the no-rastercolourchange policy enable to not waste CPU ressources uselessly, while the only 4 colours are cleverly chosen and used in a cartoon styled madness...
- Deflektor : could perhaps have been better yet the concept of the game makes it a clever port, also details like the Tape version loading parts or the good chiptunes enable a proper CPC experience.
- Switchblade : the GX4000 cartridge version is displaying extra features such as large vertical ditherings in a lot of Red shades (sky) or PLUS Hardwired sprites "patches" as extra coloured tiles...this is more than enough to get a properly coloured feeling.
Some Speccy port "done right" may also use Mode 0 instead of Mode 1... hence being graphically fully CPC (yet tiles or sprites are still comparable in dimensions).
The result may vary from awful (the code is not optimised enough for CPC) to great (alles ist richtig...).
Example of such games :
- Space Gun : Mode 0 and even PLUS features, yet the attribute-designed-unmasked sprites remain, in a sluggish game.