King of Chicago
1986
Cinemaware's debut. A 1930s Chicago gangster interactive movie establishing the studio's cinematic template.
1986 – 1991
All 13 Cinemaware titles - filter by platform.
1986
Cinemaware's debut. A 1930s Chicago gangster interactive movie establishing the studio's cinematic template.
1986 / 1987
The landmark title. Jim Sachs's hand-painted artwork defined Amiga visual ambition. Released unfinished, but artistically groundbreaking.
1987
Arabian Nights adventure following Defender. Continued the studio's painted visual style.
1987
Star Wars missile-defence theme. Space-based shoot-'em-up with Cinemaware presentation values.
1987
Licensed Three Stooges property with live-action footage incorporated into the game. One of gaming's earliest live-action hybrid titles.
1988
1940s pulp sci-fi. Rocket pack action, orchestral Bob Lindstrom score, and high production values at their peak.
1988
First in the TV Sports series. Broadcast presentation style with TV-style cameras, commentary, and professional production.
1989
Doug Sharp's B-movie masterpiece. 1950s giant ants, real-time town exploration, branching narrative - the studio's most ambitious game.
1990
Standalone sequel to It Came from the Desert. Amiga exclusive with expanded ant-invasion narrative.
1990
TV Sports broadcast basketball with Cinemaware production values. Second in the TV Sports franchise.
1990
WWI flight game with diary narrative and award-winning storytelling. Amiga Power Game of the Year; remastered on Steam in 2014.
1991
TV Sports baseball. US version released as Bo Jackson Baseball by Data East with Bo Jackson endorsement.
1991
The final Cinemaware title. TV Sports boxing with ABC branding on DOS. The studio filed for bankruptcy shortly after release.