Palace Software was founded in 1983 by Pete Stone and Richard Leinfellner as part of the Palace Group - an entertainment company with roots in music and film. Operating out of London, Palace produced some of the most visually striking and commercially provocative games of the 8-bit and 16-bit era.
Their debut, The Evil Dead (1984), was a licensed tie-in with Sam Raimi's cult horror film. But it was Barbarian: The Ultimate Warrior (1987) that put Palace on the map - and in the headlines. The game's cover art, featuring Maria Whittaker and Michael Van Wijk in warrior attire, attracted the ire of Mary Whitehouse's Clean Up TV campaign and became one of the most debated pieces of UK games marketing of the decade.
Palace was acquired by Titus Software in 1991. Their legacy - sharp code, Richard Joseph's unforgettable SID and Amiga compositions, and an uncompromising attitude to spectacle - defines British gaming's 8-bit golden age.