32 min

Indie Spotlight: Richard Bannister (Retro Games for Mac Collection‪)‬ The Life & Times of Video Games

    • Video Games

This is a sponsored post, but don't let that turn you off. I made a point of doing the interview as I would any other — and Richard Bannister has some fun stories to tell.
Richard Bannister is best-known for his Mac-native emulator ports of BSNES, Nestopia, Genesis Plus, and Boycott Advance, plus some two-dozen others, which he built and maintained through the 2000s and returned to relatively recently after a long hiatus. But he also has a fantastic game music player called Audio Overload (with Mac and Windows versions) that supports more than 30 console/handheld/computer file formats.
And this year, during a period of unemployment, he decided to flex his creative muscles and make some games. He's up to 20 in all, each inspired by a classic arcade game or early home computer puzzle game — and very often by multiple variants of a particular game — and he's selling them on the Mac App Store. He's got his own version of Mr Do — via Amstrad CPC clone Fruity Frank — called Fascinating Fruit, and a Snake/Pac-Man hybrid called Wacky Snake, plus a Crystal Quest reimagining called Space Diamonds and a JezzBall/Barrack clone called Little Green Balls that I can personally attest feels just like the original. And many others, available individually or in two discounted bundles.
In this interview we discuss his Retro Games for Mac collection — its inspirations, design, development, cheat codes(!), and future plans — as well as his 90s shareware games and his contributions to the emulator scene.
Interview notes:

His Breakout-style game is called Shaded Bricks


It's inspired by Commodore 64 game Crillion


1992 Mac game Diamonds



Fascinating Fruit is based on the arcade game Mr Do

But also on Amstrad CPC game Fruity Frank


cheat codes include "drfauci" to give your character a mask and "fiveaday" to swap fruits and vegetables out for junk food (see below for how they change the appearance)

I covered the rise and fall of Ambrosia Software in a PAX talk that you can read/listen to here

Ambrosia Software's Pengo clone Bubble Trouble is no longer available, except via abandonware sites

Ice Squishing

His shareware games included Smashing Windows and Star Chaos


Pang aka Buster Brothers arcade game


Crystal Quest is available on modern systems (Mac, Windows, Xbox 360) thanks to the company co-founded by its creator Patrick Buckland

There was indeed a Game Boy port, though the game was never going to work well with d-pad controls

Richard Bannister's original shareware clone was called Space Debris

His new version is Space Diamonds


Richard Bannister's emulators

Audio Overload

You can find some of the games and emulators John Stiles made at the Macintosh Garden



Frodo C64 emulator (and Richard Bannister's Mac port)

French-territory-only computer, the Thomson MO5


RB's emulators of them: Thom, TEO, MO5


Cities Skylines


Wacky Snake - Pac-Man/Snake hybrid

You can send RB feedback via the form at bannister.org/email or from inside any of his games


Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

This is a sponsored post, but don't let that turn you off. I made a point of doing the interview as I would any other — and Richard Bannister has some fun stories to tell.
Richard Bannister is best-known for his Mac-native emulator ports of BSNES, Nestopia, Genesis Plus, and Boycott Advance, plus some two-dozen others, which he built and maintained through the 2000s and returned to relatively recently after a long hiatus. But he also has a fantastic game music player called Audio Overload (with Mac and Windows versions) that supports more than 30 console/handheld/computer file formats.
And this year, during a period of unemployment, he decided to flex his creative muscles and make some games. He's up to 20 in all, each inspired by a classic arcade game or early home computer puzzle game — and very often by multiple variants of a particular game — and he's selling them on the Mac App Store. He's got his own version of Mr Do — via Amstrad CPC clone Fruity Frank — called Fascinating Fruit, and a Snake/Pac-Man hybrid called Wacky Snake, plus a Crystal Quest reimagining called Space Diamonds and a JezzBall/Barrack clone called Little Green Balls that I can personally attest feels just like the original. And many others, available individually or in two discounted bundles.
In this interview we discuss his Retro Games for Mac collection — its inspirations, design, development, cheat codes(!), and future plans — as well as his 90s shareware games and his contributions to the emulator scene.
Interview notes:

His Breakout-style game is called Shaded Bricks


It's inspired by Commodore 64 game Crillion


1992 Mac game Diamonds



Fascinating Fruit is based on the arcade game Mr Do

But also on Amstrad CPC game Fruity Frank


cheat codes include "drfauci" to give your character a mask and "fiveaday" to swap fruits and vegetables out for junk food (see below for how they change the appearance)

I covered the rise and fall of Ambrosia Software in a PAX talk that you can read/listen to here

Ambrosia Software's Pengo clone Bubble Trouble is no longer available, except via abandonware sites

Ice Squishing

His shareware games included Smashing Windows and Star Chaos


Pang aka Buster Brothers arcade game


Crystal Quest is available on modern systems (Mac, Windows, Xbox 360) thanks to the company co-founded by its creator Patrick Buckland

There was indeed a Game Boy port, though the game was never going to work well with d-pad controls

Richard Bannister's original shareware clone was called Space Debris

His new version is Space Diamonds


Richard Bannister's emulators

Audio Overload

You can find some of the games and emulators John Stiles made at the Macintosh Garden



Frodo C64 emulator (and Richard Bannister's Mac port)

French-territory-only computer, the Thomson MO5


RB's emulators of them: Thom, TEO, MO5


Cities Skylines


Wacky Snake - Pac-Man/Snake hybrid

You can send RB feedback via the form at bannister.org/email or from inside any of his games


Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

32 min

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