The Centre for Computing History are holding their 2025 Retro Computer Festival this weekend (15th and 16th November 2025) - and this time it's the "Gaming Edition"
You'll be able to see micros and consoles from the 70s, 80s and 90s running the very best of vintage and modern games, as well as the chance to buy retro stuff, meet developers and fellow collectors.
Details are below
Dean Belfield (Break Into Program) - @breakintoprogram.co.uk
I'll be exhibiting a handful of retro development systems I've used, from the Tatung Einstein system I used to develop games on the Amstrad CPC and Spectrum to the latest and greatest, the Spectrum Next development system I'm using to develop a new 3D engine game library for the Spectrum Next team.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Matthew Bennion (Matteusbeus / Pixel Pusher Games) - @matteusbeus.bsky.social
Matt will be showcasing Chords, his upcoming title in development for the Sega Mega Drive. Chords is a visual novel–style graphical adventure, drawing inspiration from classics like Snatcher on the Sega CD. Expect retro charm, atmospheric storytelling, and a unique throwback to the golden age of 16-bit adventures. @RetroSegaDev
[Saturday & Sunday]
Roy Templeman (Loud Scots Bloke) - @loudscotsbloke.bsky.social
The Mattel Aquarius is often remembered as a quirky footnote in home computing history – underpowered, short-lived, and quickly overshadowed by its rivals. So why on earth would anyone choose to develop new commercial cassette games for it in the 21st century? I’m the only Aquarius developer doing just that, with six released titles to date.
In November, I’ll share what drew me to this humble underdog, the technical challenges of squeezing fun and creativity into such tight limitations, and the process of producing and distributing physical cassette-based games today. Expect a mix of nostalgia, coding insights, and a celebration of what makes retro development so rewarding. If that wasnt difficult enough, I enter the 10Line game challenge every year, writing 10Line games on the humble Aquarius, which is often a bigger challenge than writing full-blown commercial games!! Come and see them in action, and have a go!! Can you beat the hi-score? And of course, you’ll also get the chance to play all my games for yourself, and see just how much fun can be squeezed into this unlikely underdog.
I will be exhibiting my Aquarius running all my games (13 in total!), as well as my incredibly rare Aquarius II, with the one and only game ever produced for this gem of my collection. Guess who wrote the one and only game for the Aquarius II??!!
I will also be showing off just what gaming was like on other underdog machines! No Speccy, C64 or Amstrad here. Odd, rare, poorly spec'ed and utterly fantasic. Machines you will never of heard of, playing games you never knew existed.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Johnny Blanchard (ReEnthused) - @ReEnthused
Johnny is best known as a collector of retro computers and consoles, running the re:enthused youtube channel and author of Gaming in the Obscure, but he also has quite a few ports of his arcade game Jurl on classic machines as well as Miles and his upcoming game Quantum Hop.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Gareth Qually - SlowlyMakingSmoke.com
Gareth will be exhibiting some of the creative tools that were, and still are, used on the Amiga. Page through some of those classic ring bound manuals, while Gareth demonstrates everything from pixels to 3D rendering. Even have a go with the features of the software packages we all know along with a few hidden gems.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Kevin Edwards (Retro Videogame development) - @kevedwardsretro.bsky.social
My career as a videogame developer started on the BBC Micro with my first published game, 'Atomic Protector', published back in 1983. My latest game is 'LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga' - available on various consoles.
I shall be demonstrating how I created BBC Micro and Acorn Electron games back in the day using the original 6502 assembly language source code:- 'Galaforce' (1986) and 'Crazee Rider' (1987). I have more recently adapted this code to build using modern day hardware/tools and will show how easy it is to develop BBC Micro games in 2025 on a PC!
There will also be a display of development documents and correspondence for 'Crazee Rider'. The sprite editor used to create the 'Crazee Rider' graphics can also be seen.
As a bonus I shall have some other top BBC Micro games building from their original source code - the Ultimate experience! One of them left only 9 bytes of memory free. Programmers were always battling with memory, or lack of it, on the BBC Micro!
[Saturday & Sunday]
Stephen Clemmet (Cambridge Micrologic)
Step back to 1984! - Cambridge Micrologic will be bringing classics of early artificial intelligence on the BBC Micro: Tic-Tac-Toe that learns from its mistakes. An updated version of Iceberg from an Usborne programming book, and the legendary Aardvark animal guessing game that builds its own knowledge tree as it is played through the weekend. It should be a genius by Sunday afternoon.
To add some vintage flair, we’ve updated them with Kenneth Kendall’s BBC voice and the *SPEECH synthesiser - the same system that squeezed a full English vocabulary out of just 2K of allophone ROM. Will you be able make it say a convinicing sound of your name?
[Saturday & Sunday]
Ben Coffer (Sharpworks) - @sharpworks.bsky.social
Ben will be bringing his Sharp MZ-80A and MZ-700 computers with a variety of games both old and new to show off for these lesser supported platforms.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Richard Broadhurst (TrickySoft) - @trickysoft
Richard will be bringing BBC Micros running a selection of his Trickysoft games amongst others, plus a selection of add ons and controllers including paddles and trackballs.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Andy Toone (Fearsum Beasts) - https://feersumbeasts.com/
Andy of Feersum Technology (@lockFarm) will be demonstrating retro 2D arcade graphics on the new VideoBeast graphics chip for 8-bit machines. He'll also be showing MicroBeast Z80 kits and perhaps some other unusual hardware.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Quang DX (Asobitech) - @asobitech.com
Starting his professional game dev career on the Game Boy Color in 2000 (Re-Volt, Lego Stunt Rally), things have come full circle as they make new games for old systems. Releasing Super Jetpak DX (2020) and recently D*Fuzed (2025) for the Game Boy over 20 years on from where he started. Now working with Bitmap Bureau on the upcoming Terminator 2D: NO FATE game, Quang will be talking about what it takes to be making retro games in a modern age.
[Saturday & Sunday]
The Big Red Arrow Club - @BigRedArrowClub
Lighting up the room once again this year are the Big Red Arrow Club — a group of familiar faces from YouTube’s retro and vintage tech community. They’ll be there to chat, share stories, and showcase some truly fascinating technology.
Appearing in person this year:
[Saturday & Sunday]
Roger from RTR - @RetroTechRepair
Roger will be showcasing rare and classic consoles and computers built around the Zilog Z80, together with working projects old and new from his YouTube channel Retro Tech Repair.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Jonathan “theJPster” Pallant presents “A sneaky lunchtime game …” - @thejpster.org.uk
JP is bringing a selection of 1990’s UNIX RISC exotica. You definitely weren’t supposed to be playing games on your $15,000 Silicon Graphics workstation, but that’s not going to stop us this weekend! Pop by the stand and have an illicit five minutes of gameplay on a machine you couldn’t afford to have at home. But don’t let your boss catch you!
[Saturday & Sunday]
Tom Williamson (Wi-Fi Sheep) - @WiFiSheep
This year’s Retro Gaming theme is brought to life by a return visit of Tom Williamson of the Wi-Fi Sheep Tech Channel. His exhibit spans the full spectrum of gaming history: from the Commodore 64 and Nintendo NES 8-bit era, through BBC Micro and Acorn RISC PC classics, to x86 16-bit favourites and modern ports of 26/32-bit titles. Blending original machines with carefully rebuilt and modified hardware, Tom showcases how these systems shaped the golden age of gaming and why they still inspire players and makers today.
All exhibits will be 'hands on' and Tom will be 'on hand' to talk tech and reminisce!
[Saturday & Sunday]
Nic Chester
Hacks & homebrew; Celebrating games and consoles that did things they weren't supposed to, running games that weren't supposed to be written.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Tony Jewell (Shortcircuit / HereBeDragons) - @heredragons.be
Tony will be bringing Dragons - and lots of them too - to show that just because the graphics are a little too green and slightly chunky, it doesn't mean the games aren't great. Most of the games are modern too, showing how the Dragon's unique architecture still inspires people to write games for it.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Adrian Page-Mitchell
Adrian Page-Mitchell will be bringing some of his more exotic consoles from his collection, this will probably be from his PC Engine and Turbografx holdings, certainly his Bally home System, and then if he can find some room, there will be some handheld goodness too
[Saturday & Sunday]
John Brown (Retro Bytes) - @RetroBytesUK
Early computers could fill an entire building, and would cost significantly more than the building it filled. Did that stop mainframe users from writing/playing computer games, heck no. So come and see some of the earliest examples of computer games, on some the earliest computers in the form of replica of a 60s mainframe (PDP-10), and the first bitmap graphics terminal (Knight TV).
[Saturday & Sunday]
Pete Golding (ShortCircuit) and John Newcombe (GlassTTY) - @petescircuit.bsky.social
Very much trying not to cause a ‘Short Circuit’ we will be going way back in time to 1958 to recreate one of the worlds first games “tennis for two” on an oscilloscope. We will also be looking at a game or two on another early machine with a new replica of the PDP 1, and if that wasn't enough we will be sharing the experience of playing 'Kill the Bit' and 'Pong' on the front panel switches of an Altair 8800.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Dan Wilkin
Dan bloody loves a Japanese train game, so that’s what he will be displaying at the Retro Computing Festival. Having had his best bits out at Made in Japan events, he is now frantically scrabbling for something new and interesting to show. It will probably be all right; he will try to make a whacky contraption to make it worth stopping by.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Will Sheldrake (Rage Against the Retro) - rageagainsttheretro.com
Celebrating one of my favourite games from the 1980s - Bomb Jack! From where it started in the arcades, to the versions we played at home. And who knows, maybe even a modern remake or two?
[Saturday & Sunday]
Adrian Graham (Binary Dinosaurs) - @binarydinosaurs.co.uk
Come and play Chuckie Egg on 4 machines of the day!
[Saturday & Sunday]
Andy Fell
Andy will be bringing us the more obscure side of console/micro gaming - this will include 2 Nuon systems , Sam Coupe, network Doom multiplayer on a Jaguar , CDTV with a CD game , Megajet , and 2 Apple Pippins!
[Saturday & Sunday]
Mark Nias (Dexter's Lab) - @dexterstechlab.bsky.social
Although the Quantel Harriet from 1991 that will be present at Retrofest this year is very much NOT a gaming machine the Paintbox would have been used within the gaming industry to generate promotional videos and other marketing material like TV adverts. For 2025 the Harriet will be operated by Matthias and Mark to make some animated graphics for Ocean games that could have been used as an intro to a promotional video tape. The Quantel Harriet was released in 1990 as a smaller, cheaper and less capable machine to the Harry. But it went on to make short video graphics effects and TV intros for many well known TV programs from the BBC, ITV and CH4 in the 1990s
[Saturday & Sunday]
Stephen Usher - @srusher.bsky.social
[Saturday & Sunday]
Pixel Addict - pixel.addict.media
[Saturday & Sunday]
Andy Hu
[Saturday & Sunday]
Dean Kennedy - Console Revive
Welcome to Console Revive, your go-to destination for breathing new life into your beloved gaming consoles! As passionate gamers and tech enthusiasts, we understand the joy and nostalgia that come with playing on your favourite systems. Our mission is to provide top-quality components and accessories at unbeatable prices, helping you upgrade and enhance your gaming experience without breaking the bank. We believe every gamer deserves the best, which is why we source high-quality products for a wide range of consoles.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Derek Knaggs - Flamelily Retro Store
New stuff for your old tech. If you love modern hardware for old systems you will know about the Raspberry Pi Pico. We are the UK reseller for a few Pico devices, the BlueSCSI, the PicoGUS and the PicoMEM. We have wallet friendly kits and fully assembled units for purchase. Come and see all these in action at our table. We also now sell the Denise which is a Mini-ITX Amiga recreation motherboard and great for restoring a damaged Amiga A500+.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Spencer Owen - RC2014
A selection of RC2014 retro computer kits based on the Z80, which will be demonstrating some of the things you can do with CP/M, BASIC and Z80 assembly code, along with a few kits for sale so you can build your own Z80 computer from scratch!
[Saturday & Sunday]
You can find out more here
You'll be able to see micros and consoles from the 70s, 80s and 90s running the very best of vintage and modern games, as well as the chance to buy retro stuff, meet developers and fellow collectors.
Details are below
Game Devs
This year we'll be dedicating the classroom to the art of games development. Come meet the developers - the people who wrote the software back in the day and the people who still write for their retro machines today. Learn the tips and techniques, past and present.Dean Belfield (Break Into Program) - @breakintoprogram.co.uk
I'll be exhibiting a handful of retro development systems I've used, from the Tatung Einstein system I used to develop games on the Amstrad CPC and Spectrum to the latest and greatest, the Spectrum Next development system I'm using to develop a new 3D engine game library for the Spectrum Next team.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Matthew Bennion (Matteusbeus / Pixel Pusher Games) - @matteusbeus.bsky.social
Matt will be showcasing Chords, his upcoming title in development for the Sega Mega Drive. Chords is a visual novel–style graphical adventure, drawing inspiration from classics like Snatcher on the Sega CD. Expect retro charm, atmospheric storytelling, and a unique throwback to the golden age of 16-bit adventures. @RetroSegaDev
[Saturday & Sunday]
Roy Templeman (Loud Scots Bloke) - @loudscotsbloke.bsky.social
The Mattel Aquarius is often remembered as a quirky footnote in home computing history – underpowered, short-lived, and quickly overshadowed by its rivals. So why on earth would anyone choose to develop new commercial cassette games for it in the 21st century? I’m the only Aquarius developer doing just that, with six released titles to date.
In November, I’ll share what drew me to this humble underdog, the technical challenges of squeezing fun and creativity into such tight limitations, and the process of producing and distributing physical cassette-based games today. Expect a mix of nostalgia, coding insights, and a celebration of what makes retro development so rewarding. If that wasnt difficult enough, I enter the 10Line game challenge every year, writing 10Line games on the humble Aquarius, which is often a bigger challenge than writing full-blown commercial games!! Come and see them in action, and have a go!! Can you beat the hi-score? And of course, you’ll also get the chance to play all my games for yourself, and see just how much fun can be squeezed into this unlikely underdog.
I will be exhibiting my Aquarius running all my games (13 in total!), as well as my incredibly rare Aquarius II, with the one and only game ever produced for this gem of my collection. Guess who wrote the one and only game for the Aquarius II??!!
I will also be showing off just what gaming was like on other underdog machines! No Speccy, C64 or Amstrad here. Odd, rare, poorly spec'ed and utterly fantasic. Machines you will never of heard of, playing games you never knew existed.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Johnny Blanchard (ReEnthused) - @ReEnthused
Johnny is best known as a collector of retro computers and consoles, running the re:enthused youtube channel and author of Gaming in the Obscure, but he also has quite a few ports of his arcade game Jurl on classic machines as well as Miles and his upcoming game Quantum Hop.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Gareth Qually - SlowlyMakingSmoke.com
Gareth will be exhibiting some of the creative tools that were, and still are, used on the Amiga. Page through some of those classic ring bound manuals, while Gareth demonstrates everything from pixels to 3D rendering. Even have a go with the features of the software packages we all know along with a few hidden gems.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Kevin Edwards (Retro Videogame development) - @kevedwardsretro.bsky.social
My career as a videogame developer started on the BBC Micro with my first published game, 'Atomic Protector', published back in 1983. My latest game is 'LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga' - available on various consoles.
I shall be demonstrating how I created BBC Micro and Acorn Electron games back in the day using the original 6502 assembly language source code:- 'Galaforce' (1986) and 'Crazee Rider' (1987). I have more recently adapted this code to build using modern day hardware/tools and will show how easy it is to develop BBC Micro games in 2025 on a PC!
There will also be a display of development documents and correspondence for 'Crazee Rider'. The sprite editor used to create the 'Crazee Rider' graphics can also be seen.
As a bonus I shall have some other top BBC Micro games building from their original source code - the Ultimate experience! One of them left only 9 bytes of memory free. Programmers were always battling with memory, or lack of it, on the BBC Micro!
[Saturday & Sunday]
Stephen Clemmet (Cambridge Micrologic)
Step back to 1984! - Cambridge Micrologic will be bringing classics of early artificial intelligence on the BBC Micro: Tic-Tac-Toe that learns from its mistakes. An updated version of Iceberg from an Usborne programming book, and the legendary Aardvark animal guessing game that builds its own knowledge tree as it is played through the weekend. It should be a genius by Sunday afternoon.
To add some vintage flair, we’ve updated them with Kenneth Kendall’s BBC voice and the *SPEECH synthesiser - the same system that squeezed a full English vocabulary out of just 2K of allophone ROM. Will you be able make it say a convinicing sound of your name?
[Saturday & Sunday]
Ben Coffer (Sharpworks) - @sharpworks.bsky.social
Ben will be bringing his Sharp MZ-80A and MZ-700 computers with a variety of games both old and new to show off for these lesser supported platforms.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Richard Broadhurst (TrickySoft) - @trickysoft
Richard will be bringing BBC Micros running a selection of his Trickysoft games amongst others, plus a selection of add ons and controllers including paddles and trackballs.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Andy Toone (Fearsum Beasts) - https://feersumbeasts.com/
Andy of Feersum Technology (@lockFarm) will be demonstrating retro 2D arcade graphics on the new VideoBeast graphics chip for 8-bit machines. He'll also be showing MicroBeast Z80 kits and perhaps some other unusual hardware.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Quang DX (Asobitech) - @asobitech.com
Starting his professional game dev career on the Game Boy Color in 2000 (Re-Volt, Lego Stunt Rally), things have come full circle as they make new games for old systems. Releasing Super Jetpak DX (2020) and recently D*Fuzed (2025) for the Game Boy over 20 years on from where he started. Now working with Bitmap Bureau on the upcoming Terminator 2D: NO FATE game, Quang will be talking about what it takes to be making retro games in a modern age.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Game Collectors
The main hall will be given over to the collectors - the games, the consoles and the computers. Expect to see an incredible range of systems and software.The Big Red Arrow Club - @BigRedArrowClub
Lighting up the room once again this year are the Big Red Arrow Club — a group of familiar faces from YouTube’s retro and vintage tech community. They’ll be there to chat, share stories, and showcase some truly fascinating technology.
Appearing in person this year:
- Kim Justice
- WhatHoSnorkers
- Dudley of Yesterzine
- MeanMachineDean
- MatteusBeus (RetroSegaDev)
- TimberWolf
- Hack Build Restore (Andi)
- Naoki’s RC
- RetroBytes (John)
- RetroKrazy (Duncan)
- Dexter’s Tech Lab
- Retronaut Tech
- Retro Tech Repair
- More Fun Making It (and Fixing It) — Lee
[Saturday & Sunday]
Roger from RTR - @RetroTechRepair
Roger will be showcasing rare and classic consoles and computers built around the Zilog Z80, together with working projects old and new from his YouTube channel Retro Tech Repair.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Jonathan “theJPster” Pallant presents “A sneaky lunchtime game …” - @thejpster.org.uk
JP is bringing a selection of 1990’s UNIX RISC exotica. You definitely weren’t supposed to be playing games on your $15,000 Silicon Graphics workstation, but that’s not going to stop us this weekend! Pop by the stand and have an illicit five minutes of gameplay on a machine you couldn’t afford to have at home. But don’t let your boss catch you!
[Saturday & Sunday]
Tom Williamson (Wi-Fi Sheep) - @WiFiSheep
This year’s Retro Gaming theme is brought to life by a return visit of Tom Williamson of the Wi-Fi Sheep Tech Channel. His exhibit spans the full spectrum of gaming history: from the Commodore 64 and Nintendo NES 8-bit era, through BBC Micro and Acorn RISC PC classics, to x86 16-bit favourites and modern ports of 26/32-bit titles. Blending original machines with carefully rebuilt and modified hardware, Tom showcases how these systems shaped the golden age of gaming and why they still inspire players and makers today.
All exhibits will be 'hands on' and Tom will be 'on hand' to talk tech and reminisce!
[Saturday & Sunday]
Nic Chester
Hacks & homebrew; Celebrating games and consoles that did things they weren't supposed to, running games that weren't supposed to be written.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Tony Jewell (Shortcircuit / HereBeDragons) - @heredragons.be
Tony will be bringing Dragons - and lots of them too - to show that just because the graphics are a little too green and slightly chunky, it doesn't mean the games aren't great. Most of the games are modern too, showing how the Dragon's unique architecture still inspires people to write games for it.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Adrian Page-Mitchell
Adrian Page-Mitchell will be bringing some of his more exotic consoles from his collection, this will probably be from his PC Engine and Turbografx holdings, certainly his Bally home System, and then if he can find some room, there will be some handheld goodness too
[Saturday & Sunday]
John Brown (Retro Bytes) - @RetroBytesUK
Early computers could fill an entire building, and would cost significantly more than the building it filled. Did that stop mainframe users from writing/playing computer games, heck no. So come and see some of the earliest examples of computer games, on some the earliest computers in the form of replica of a 60s mainframe (PDP-10), and the first bitmap graphics terminal (Knight TV).
[Saturday & Sunday]
Pete Golding (ShortCircuit) and John Newcombe (GlassTTY) - @petescircuit.bsky.social
Very much trying not to cause a ‘Short Circuit’ we will be going way back in time to 1958 to recreate one of the worlds first games “tennis for two” on an oscilloscope. We will also be looking at a game or two on another early machine with a new replica of the PDP 1, and if that wasn't enough we will be sharing the experience of playing 'Kill the Bit' and 'Pong' on the front panel switches of an Altair 8800.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Dan Wilkin
Dan bloody loves a Japanese train game, so that’s what he will be displaying at the Retro Computing Festival. Having had his best bits out at Made in Japan events, he is now frantically scrabbling for something new and interesting to show. It will probably be all right; he will try to make a whacky contraption to make it worth stopping by.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Will Sheldrake (Rage Against the Retro) - rageagainsttheretro.com
Celebrating one of my favourite games from the 1980s - Bomb Jack! From where it started in the arcades, to the versions we played at home. And who knows, maybe even a modern remake or two?
[Saturday & Sunday]
Adrian Graham (Binary Dinosaurs) - @binarydinosaurs.co.uk
Come and play Chuckie Egg on 4 machines of the day!
[Saturday & Sunday]
Andy Fell
Andy will be bringing us the more obscure side of console/micro gaming - this will include 2 Nuon systems , Sam Coupe, network Doom multiplayer on a Jaguar , CDTV with a CD game , Megajet , and 2 Apple Pippins!
[Saturday & Sunday]
Mark Nias (Dexter's Lab) - @dexterstechlab.bsky.social
Although the Quantel Harriet from 1991 that will be present at Retrofest this year is very much NOT a gaming machine the Paintbox would have been used within the gaming industry to generate promotional videos and other marketing material like TV adverts. For 2025 the Harriet will be operated by Matthias and Mark to make some animated graphics for Ocean games that could have been used as an intro to a promotional video tape. The Quantel Harriet was released in 1990 as a smaller, cheaper and less capable machine to the Harry. But it went on to make short video graphics effects and TV intros for many well known TV programs from the BBC, ITV and CH4 in the 1990s
[Saturday & Sunday]
Stephen Usher - @srusher.bsky.social
[Saturday & Sunday]
Pixel Addict - pixel.addict.media
[Saturday & Sunday]
Andy Hu
[Saturday & Sunday]
Stores
And of course, it'll only be 40 days to Christmas - so why not treat your loved ones (or yourself!) to a present from our stores, or from the museum's gift shop!Dean Kennedy - Console Revive
Welcome to Console Revive, your go-to destination for breathing new life into your beloved gaming consoles! As passionate gamers and tech enthusiasts, we understand the joy and nostalgia that come with playing on your favourite systems. Our mission is to provide top-quality components and accessories at unbeatable prices, helping you upgrade and enhance your gaming experience without breaking the bank. We believe every gamer deserves the best, which is why we source high-quality products for a wide range of consoles.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Derek Knaggs - Flamelily Retro Store
New stuff for your old tech. If you love modern hardware for old systems you will know about the Raspberry Pi Pico. We are the UK reseller for a few Pico devices, the BlueSCSI, the PicoGUS and the PicoMEM. We have wallet friendly kits and fully assembled units for purchase. Come and see all these in action at our table. We also now sell the Denise which is a Mini-ITX Amiga recreation motherboard and great for restoring a damaged Amiga A500+.
[Saturday & Sunday]
Spencer Owen - RC2014
A selection of RC2014 retro computer kits based on the Z80, which will be demonstrating some of the things you can do with CP/M, BASIC and Z80 assembly code, along with a few kits for sale so you can build your own Z80 computer from scratch!
[Saturday & Sunday]
You can find out more here