| MediaWiki:Sitenotice |
|---|
| 2026-03-12: Cocopedia.com is now using a new caching system that should make things faster. Please let me know if you encounter any new issues.
2026-03-15: MediaWiki has been reinstalled and the old database and files restored. It was pretty clogged up from being upgraded so many times since 2004. I am also testing out Cloudflare to see if it can prevent the 'bot assaults that took the site down last year. OS-9 Al (talk) 21:20, 15 March 2026 (EDT)) |
Temple of ROM
| WELCOME |
|---|
| Looking for CoCo help? If you are trying to do something with your old Color Computer, read this quick reference. Want to contribute to this wiki? Be sure to read this first. This CoCo wiki project was started on October 29, 2004. --OS-9 Al Read-only mirror: https://cocopedia.dgb3.net |
See Recent Changes. | About this site. | Join the E-Mail List or Facebook Group. | Contact me with updates/questions.
This page was last updated on 09/30/2024. Total Pages: 749. Total Files: 997.
Home / Software - Temple of ROM
| Temple of ROM | |
|---|---|
| [[Image:|296px|Temple of ROM]] | |
| Year | 1982 |
| Publisher | Tandy/Radio Shack |
| Author | Rick Adams |
| Media | Program Pak |
| Requires | Joystick, 16K RAM |
| Optional | |
| Graphic mode | PMODE 4 256x192x2 |
Temple of ROM is a top down, two-dimensional arcade dungeon crawl by Rick Adams. Seeking a high score, the player earns points by collecting treasures and killing monsters in a LARGE, scrolling maze. Adams has acknowledged being inspired by the Atari 2600 classic cartridge Adventure, which this game is a loose clone of.
One unique element is teleporter dots. Adams was inspired to include them by a fantasy novel series he was a fan of. He was surprised when Tandy's game manual made no use of his background high-fantasy story, using a space science fiction setting instead.
When he wrote the game, Adams could not yet afford a disk drive, and had to program the game on a cassette-only system, using the EDTASM+ cartridge assembler. His CoCo had an overheating defect common in early CoCo 1's that caused frequent crashes, which required him to save frequently, sometimes spraying the interior of the CoCo with freon to delay the lockup long enough to finish the slow save to tape.
Although the official Tandy game manual says the game requires 16K, other sources say it only needs 4K.
In 2020, Adams released a sequel with a bigger maze and more monsters. It's available for $15.
External Links
[edit | edit source]- Official Website
- Listing at L. Curtis Boyle's CoCo Game List page (spoilers!)
- Universal Videogame List page
- Moby Games page
- At the 2024 Tandy Assembly, author Rick Adams told various stories, including the story of developing Temple of Rom.
- Gameplay Video on the The Original Gamer Stevie Strow's channel.
- Rick Adams interview on the The Original Gamer Stevie Strow's channel.