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en:companias:cascade

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Cascade Games Ltd Logo

TECHNICAL DATA

NAME:Cascade Games Ltd.
ORIGIN:Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England (UK)
.pcw-index-tree
REGISTRATION:UK Companies House 01755554
STATUS:Historical (Inactive / Dissolved)
SPECIALITY:Entertainment Software and Hardware Interfaces
OFFICIAL WEB:Does not exist
Description

Cascade Games Ltd. was a prominent British software house and peripheral manufacturer founded in the early 1980s in Yorkshire. Although its primary commercial focus was developing successful arcade ports and combat simulators for 8-bit home computers, the company played a pioneering role within the Amstrad PCW ecosystem. It achieved this milestone by designing and introducing dedicated hardware engineered to turn an office machine into a viable gaming computer.

The "Joyce-Stick" Milestone

By mid-1986, with the explosion of sales surrounding the Amstrad PCW 8256 and 8512, Cascade Games noticed that users highly demanded interactive software but faced severe constraints due to the system's native keyboard layout. To address this, the firm designed and manufactured a proprietary hardware adapter commercially branded as the Cascade Joyce-Stick Interface.

The peripheral plugged directly into the rear expansion port of the PCW 8256/8512 models. It provided a standard Atari/Commodore-specification DE-9 9-pin joystick port, allowing any conventional joystick on the market to be used. A crucial historical milestone verified in contemporary technical publications (such as Amstrad Computer User in 1986) reveals that Cascade officially utilized Amstrad's own corporate exhibition stand at British computer trade fairs to showcase their interface to the press. This strategic move aimed to establish a unified benchmark for all software houses looking to port arcade games to the PCW platform.

The interface was originally retailed at a price of £24.95 (for the standalone hardware unit) or in a promotional software bundle ranging between £27.95 and £28.95, which packaged the adapter alongside one of Cascade's own computer games adapted natively to interface with the controller hardware logic.

Hardware Specifications (Architecture)

Unlike subsequent competitors such as Kempston or Spectravideo, Cascade's interface physical architecture possesses its own unique memory-mapped I/O decoding registers within the Z80 microprocessor—a technical footprint critical for modern preservation frameworks like the CP/M Box emulator or MiSTer FPGA computer cores:

  • I/O Port Address: The hardware decoder maps joystick polling reads directly onto Input/Output port 0E0h (&HE0).
  • Bit Polling Protocol (Active Low Logic): When an IN instruction is executed on port 0E0h, the physical status of the joystick microswitches is mapped into specific data bits as follows (where a binary 0 value signals button depression or physical direction engagement):
    • Bit 7: Fire button. Registers a 0 value when pressed.
    • Bit 4: Up direction. Registers a 0 value when the shaft is pushed forward.
    • Bit 2: Down direction. Registers a 0 value when the shaft is pulled backward.
    • Bit 1: Right direction. Registers a 0 value when pushed rightward.
    • Bit 0: Left direction. Registers a 0 value when pushed leftward.
    • Bits 3, 5, and 6 are ignored by the internal Cascade decoding logic circuitry natively.

This specific Cascade protocol handling was coded natively into the interface routines of monumental software titles for the computer, such as Ocean Software's official port of Head over Heels and Rainbird's Starglider.

Known Addresses (England, UK)
Development Headquarters and Commercial Offices Suite 4, 1-3 Haywra Crescent, Harrogate, North Yorkshire (Postcode: HG1 5BG, England) Original verified mail order contact: Telephone (0423) 504663 Official UK Companies House Registration Number: 01755554 Historical Post Office Transcash Account Data: Giro No. 655 6655

en/companias/cascade.1779520060.txt.gz · Última modificación: por jesus