1. Jack Tramiel

    Jack Tramiel (born 1928) is a businessman, famous for founding Commodore International, manufacturer of the Commodore PET, Commodore 64, and Commodore Amiga home computers, and later President and CEO of Atari Corp. He is known for his hard-driving style and cut-throat deal making.

  2. Joyboard

    The Joyboard is a joystick for the feet. A video game player stands on the board and moves his/her entire body for directional control. A standard Atari-type joystick (like Amiga's own Power Stick) plugs into the Joyboard to give the player access to a fire button. The employees at Amiga Inc. liked to relax by playing the Zen Meditation game. They would sit as still as possible on a Joyboard so as not to close any switches, …

  3. Tim Follin

    Tim Follin is a video game music composer who has written tracks for a variety of titles and home gaming systems, including the Sinclair ZX Spectrum, Commodore 64, Commodore Amiga, Atari ST, NES, Super Nintendo, Game Boy, Dreamcast and PlayStation. Little known, Follin's early 8- and 16-bit pieces were notable for their ambitious and imaginative use of samples, or clever manipulation of limited sound hardware - particularly with his work on the Sinclair ZX Spectrum, …

  4. Tim Wright

    Tim Wright, alias CoLD SToRAGE, is a British musician most famous for his work in video game soundtracks such as Wipeout. He first composed songs for the Commodore Amiga before joining Psygnosis (now Sony Computer Entertainment Studio Liverpool) in the early 1990s. He now works in his own company, Tantrumedia, continuing to produce music and music production software.

  5. Andrew Braybrook

    Andrew Braybrook is a programmer who helped pioneer computer games. He created games such as "Paradroid", "Gribbly's Day Out", "Uridium" and "Morpheus". He also programmed the Commodore Amiga conversion of the arcade game "Rainbow Islands". Braybrook was best known for the above games but is still remembered as the creator of some of the most original games ever.

  6. Geoff Follin

    Geoff Follin used to be a video game music composer. He wrote tracks for a variety of titles and home gaming systems, including the Sinclair ZX Spectrum, Commodore 64, Commodore Amiga, NES and Super Nintendo, often with his brother Tim Follin. A third brother, Mike Follin, also worked as a game programmer. Along with Tim, Geoff co-wrote the sountracks for, amongst others, "Gauntlet III", …

  7. Per Håkan Sundell

    Per Håkan Sundell is a programmer and computer scientist with roots in the scene and early computer entusiasts of the eightie's.

  8. Mike Richmond

    Mike Richmond (born 18 January, 1978) is a musician who has worked both in the live forum with traditional instruments and electronically. From 1992 onwards he worked on the music for several projects on the Commodore Amiga computer, most notably on some instalments of the Black Dawn series by Dreaming Methods author Andy Campbell. He also produced music for games such as Aquakon and the aborted Fortress 2 for Lee Bamber, who went on to create Dark Basic.

  9. Matthew Bevan

    Mathew Bevan is one of two hackers said to have "nearly started a third world war" according to Supervisory Special Agent Jim Christy, at the time working for the Air Force Office of Special Investigations A Welshman, he was 21 when he hacked into top-secret files of the Griffiss Air Force Base Research Laboratory in New York under the name "Kuji", intent on proving a UFO Conspiracy Theory; his sole tool was a Commodore Amiga.

  10. Yannis Brown

    Yannis Brown is a composer and sound designer for portable devices and consoles. He grew up in Adelaide, Australia. He began playing keyboards by ear at the age of 4 and started composing music around the age of 13. He then moved on to writing MOD Tracker formats on the Commodore Amiga since 1989 and later IBM PC around 1993. He was heavily involved with the music part of the DemoScene and ran Groovy Compo - a bi-weekly Tracker based internet competition first started by Mick Rippon.

  11. Iikka Keränen

    Iikka Keränen, a native of Finland, lives in Kirkland, Washington and is a level designer at Valve Software. He also co-founded Digital Eel, an independent video game development group, in 2001. His range of professional skills include illustration, 2D game art, 3D modeling, programming and game design. In his teens, Keränen programmed freeware games for the Commodore Amiga. Later he created the popular "Quake" mod "Airquake", …

  12. Edvard Toth

    Multi-disciplinary creative professional, Flash developer and technical artist, interactive entertainment veteran with more than 16 years of experience working on video-game art, technology and design in a wide variety of genres.

  13. Dale Larson
  14. Pieter Vos
  15. Bob Burns