Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Clones
Arcade clones Bug Attack, 1981, Apple II, by Cavalier Computer[35]
Arachnoid, 1982, VIC-20, by UMI
Aqua Attack, BBC Micro as part of the Welcome disk/tape with the BBC Master
Bug Off!, 1982, Atari 8-bit family, by Adventure International[36]
Caterpillar, TRS-80 Color Computer, by Aardvark[37]
Exterminator, 1982, VIC-20, C64, by Nüfekop and Bubble Bus
Katerpillar Attack, 1982, TRS-80 Color Computer, Dragon 32, by Tom Mix Software[37]
Megalegs, 1982, Atari 8-bit family, by Megasoft[38]
Myriapede, 1982, Atari 8-bit family
Video Vermin, 1982, VIC-20, by UMI[39]
Arthropod, 1983, TI-99/4A, by North Hills
Bug Blaster, 1983, C64, BBC Micro, Acorn Electron, by Alligata[40]
Bug Blaster, 1983, as part of the Friendlyware PC Arcade suite by Friendlysoft
for IBM personal computers
Centi-Bug, 1983, ZX Spectrum, by DK'Tronics (titled Centipede on screen)[41]
Maggotmania, 1983, C64, by Commodore
Megapede, 1983, ZX Spectrum, by Computerware[42]
Mouse Stampede 1983, Macintosh, by Mark of the Unicorn
Mushroom Alley, 1983, C64, by Victory Software
Spectipede, 1983, ZX Spectrum, by R&R Software
Wiggle Worm, 1984, TRS-80 Color Computer, by Chromasette[43]
Decipede, 1987, type-in version for the C64 by COMPUTE!'s Gazette[44]
Apeiron, 1995, Macintosh, by Ambrosia Software
Champ Centiped-em, 1997, MS-DOS, by CHAMProgramming[45]
BuGS, 2021, Apple IIGS, by Rand-Emonium[46]
War of the Bugs or Monsterous Manouvers [sic] in a Mushroom Maze, by Food and Fun
Corp./Armenia Ltd in 1981[32]
Jackler, by Konami in 1982[33]
Slither, by GDI in 1982 and ported to ColecoVision[34]
Home system clones