Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Broderbund Software developed The Print Shop, a program to produce signs and greeting cards, running on Apple II computers. Broderbund started discussions with Unison World about creating a version that would run on IBM PC compatibles. The two companies could not agree on a contract, but Unison World went ahead and developed an IBM PC product ...
Banner making program. Released by Broderbund; developed for Pixellite Group by Presage Software Development. Calendar Creator, last version 12: 1995-now Win Create calendars: Captain Goodnight and the Islands of Fear: 1985 AppII A side-scrolling action-adventure game where you fly a plane, drive a tank, steer a jeep, pilot a sub, and ride a tram.
Broderbund Software, Inc. (stylized as Brøderbund) was an American maker of video games, educational software, and productivity tools.Broderbund is best known for the 8-bit video game hits Choplifter, Lode Runner, Karateka, and Prince of Persia (all of which originated on the Apple II), as well as The Print Shop—originally for printing signs and banners on dot matrix printers—and the Myst ...
Broderbund Software Windows 3.1 and 95 (16 bit and 32 bit) / MS-DOS Beginning with this version every copy of Family Tree Maker for Windows came with both a Windows 95 (32-bit) and Windows 3.1x (16-bit) version. [21] [22] 3.02 October 1995 Broderbund Software Windows 32 bit [23] 3.02 Mac January 1997 Broderbund Software
Similarly, a reviewer in Issue #76 of the magazine lamented that the game was so "excellent" that it was a shame Broderbund placed copy protection on it. [12] In 1989, the game won a Software Publishers Association Excellence in Software Award for Best Social Studies/Science Program and Best Home Learning Program. [13]
The Guardian Legend [note 1] is a 1988 hybrid action-adventure/shoot 'em up video game developed by Compile for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES).It is the sequel to the 1986 MSX game Guardic, and was published and released in Japan by Irem in 1988, in North America by Broderbund in 1989, and in Europe by Nintendo in 1990.
Luther Shaw reviewed the game for Computer Gaming World, and stated that "here's another in the long line of aliens-dropping-from-the-skies-being-destroyed-by-your-weapons games.
1999 - Kid Pix Studio Deluxe was re-released by The Learning Company a year after its acquisition of Broderbund. 2000 - Kid Pix Deluxe 3 was released by Broderbund/Riverdeep. 2004 - Kid Pix Deluxe 4 was released by The Learning Company/Riverdeep. 2004 - Kid Pix Deluxe 3X (Mac OS X Edition 1.0) was released by Software MacKiev.