Alkoholtest
The keyboard graphic responds to mouse clicks, touch events, and key presses.
Hold your shift key while clicking the PET keyboard to get the graphics
characters.
(The emulator simulates pressing the PET's left shift-key at the
same time as the clicked key.)
Changing the size of memory or changing the ROM version forces a reset of the PET.
The emulator has an IEEE-488 device at address 8. It can be used load and save (.prg) files.
Some programs don't run on ROM1 and some require more memory than the default 8K.
Game Notes
May include inaccurate AI generated content
"Alkoholtest" is a lesser-known game associated with the Commodore PET, a personal computer released in the late 1970s. The game's developer and publisher remain unidentified, and there is limited documentation or historical records about its creation or distribution. It is presumed to be a text-based or simple graphical game, typical of the era, but specific details about its gameplay, mechanics, or objectives are not widely available.
The Commodore PET was primarily used for educational and business purposes, but it also hosted a variety of games, often created by hobbyists or small developers. "Alkoholtest" may have been one such amateur project, possibly distributed through user groups, magazines, or informal networks rather than through commercial channels. The title suggests it might have been related to testing or simulating alcohol-related scenarios, but this is speculative due to the lack of concrete information.
As of now, no verified screenshots, code, or detailed descriptions of "Alkoholtest" have surfaced in preserved archives or retro computing communities. Its obscurity makes it a subject of interest for enthusiasts of vintage software, but without further evidence, it remains a mysterious entry in the history of Commodore PET games.
The Commodore PET was primarily used for educational and business purposes, but it also hosted a variety of games, often created by hobbyists or small developers. "Alkoholtest" may have been one such amateur project, possibly distributed through user groups, magazines, or informal networks rather than through commercial channels. The title suggests it might have been related to testing or simulating alcohol-related scenarios, but this is speculative due to the lack of concrete information.
As of now, no verified screenshots, code, or detailed descriptions of "Alkoholtest" have surfaced in preserved archives or retro computing communities. Its obscurity makes it a subject of interest for enthusiasts of vintage software, but without further evidence, it remains a mysterious entry in the history of Commodore PET games.