Defender of the crown amiga 50011/21/2022 ![]() Commodore of America hadn’t positioned the 500 as a gaming machine quite as well, in part due to lackluster advertising. Over in the United States, things weren’t quite so rosy, with sales of the 500 a fraction of their UK counterparts. Amiga 500 (16 bit memories by Intercepto) As 1990 ticked over, the Amiga 500 was shifting some 300,000 units a year throughout Europe. The graphics and sound were flying high above the existing 8 bit competition and the Amiga was leading the way among reviewers, the press and exhibitions. Most 500 packs before this point required the consumer to purchase the additional RF modulator, but given that vast majority of households would hook machines directly to their televisions, just like their Spectrums and C64s, this inclusion was pivotal. Gaming was where the money lay, and the Amiga 500 Batman pack, launched by Commodore UK, had positioned the 500 as the must have computer for that purpose. Given its superiority to almost everything else on the market, especially in terms of graphical power, its easy to forget that the technology was now 4 years old, and this slow start meant the Amiga still had an uphill struggle on its hands. 1989 was a time when the Amiga 500 was beginning to take off at a rapid rate, and where the powerful technology was finally being seen for the power house that it was. ![]()
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