Copyright notice.
Let me first say that all programs, documentation e.t.c. on this site is the property of the original copyright owners. It is made available here for
educational purposes. If you are an original copyright owner, and object to my making the material available, please email
me, and I will remove the material immediately.
Copyright lasts for decades, computers lasts only a few years. Most Nascom's were put in the cellar in the beginning of the '80'ies, when another machine
got the attention, so I suppose there is no harm in making this material available. The Nascom was (is) a great machine for learning microprocessor basics.
Below is a list of files I have available for the Nascom-2. They are in the standard Nascom Tape format, made by the "G" command.
Most of these will run nicely on the simulator.
If you have a Nascom program which is not listed here, just email it to me, and I will put it on the list.
Filename Size Code Description
-------------- ------- ---- ----------------------------------------------------------
[games]
adventur.nas 19936 ASM A text adventure DANISH !
asteroid.nas 4701 ASM Asteroids, a classic game
monster.nas 9410 ASM A pretty nice platform game
bananflu.nas 13288 ASM A funny top down game in a maze
breakout.nas 1931 ASM You probably have tried this before.
driver.nas 2208 ASM Wow, I made this 20 years ago !
enarmet.nas 4701 ASM A slot machine game
falling.nas 4978 ASM Erling's invader like game. Nice!
labyrint.nas 3870 ASM A 3D maze.
pacman.nas 6917 ASM If this isn't a Classic .....
pirana.nas 2762 ASM Avoid the hungry fishes.
skak.nas 17997 ASM Logichess (DANISH)
snowball.nas 31293 ASM Snowball - Adventure game
lordtime.nas 35725 ASM Lords of Time - Adventure game
spacezap.nas 17997 ASM A different space game
lumberja.nas 9133 ASM Cut the trees and avoid the obstacles
[programming]
Hull Forth 1.1 13288 ASM A FORTH interpreter
Hisoft Pascal 4 2.0 23537 ASM One of the major high level languages for Nascom
BLS Pascal 1.3 13508 ASM THE major high level language for Nascom (At least in Denmark)
(This is the Pascal compiler that later became Turbo Pascal)
[others]
[Note] For the young ones of you, the above sizes are in BYTES !, not kilo- or Mega-bytes like is normal today.