Dragon's Lair (1983 video game)

Dragon's Lair is an interactive film LaserDisc video game developed by Advanced Microcomputer Systems and published by Cinematronics in 1983, as the first game in the Dragon's Lair series.[10] In the game, the protagonist Dirk the Daring is a knight attempting to rescue Princess Daphne from the evil dragon Singe who has locked the princess in the foul wizard Mordroc's castle. It featured animation by ex-Disney animator Don Bluth.

Dragon's Lair
Dragon's Lair promotional poster
Developer(s)Advanced Microcomputer Systems
Publisher(s)Cinematronics
Designer(s)Don Bluth
Rick Dyer
Programmer(s)Michael Knauer
Vince Lee
Composer(s)Chris Stone
SeriesDragon's Lair
Platform(s)Arcade, various
Release
Genre(s)Interactive movie
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer[lower-alpha 2]
CabinetUpright
Arcade systemZ80 processor on a proprietary motherboard[9]
DisplayRaster, 336 x 240, horizontal orientation

Most other games of the era represented the character as a sprite, which consisted of a series of pixels displayed in succession. Due to hardware limitations of the era, artists were greatly restricted in the detail they could achieve using that technique; the resolution, framerate and number of frames were severely constrained. Dragon's Lair overcame those limitations by tapping into the vast storage potential of the LaserDisc, but imposed other limitations on the actual gameplay.

The success of the game sparked numerous home ports, sequels and related games. In the 21st century it has been repackaged in a number of formats as a retro or historic game.

Gameplay

The game is "on rails", meaning the narrative is predetermined and the player has very limited influence on its progression.[11] The game consists almost entirely of animated cutscenes. The player should execute an action at the correct time by selecting a direction or pressing a button in order to clear each quick time event (QTE). Comedic aspects of the game include bizarre-looking creatures and humorous death scenes, and the portrayal of the player character as a clumsy, easily scared and reluctant hero. The player does not control the character's actions directly- but controls his reflexes, with different full motion video (FMV) segments playing for correct or incorrect choices. The game consists of a sequence of challenges played in a random order. Some scenes are played more than once before reaching the end and additionally some scenes are flipped or mirrored such that the opposite actions (e.g. left instead of right) are required.

Plot

The attract mode of the game displays various short vignettes of gameplay accompanied by the following narration: "Dragon's Lair: The fantasy adventure where you become a valiant knight, on a quest to rescue the fair princess from the clutches of an evil dragon. You control the actions of a daring adventurer, finding his way through the castle of a dark wizard, who has enchanted it with treacherous monsters and obstacles. In the mysterious caverns below the castle, your odyssey continues against the awesome forces that oppose your efforts to reach the Dragon's Lair. Lead on, adventurer. Your quest awaits!"

Development

Dragon's Lair began as a concept by Rick Dyer, president of Advanced Microcomputer Systems (which later became RDI Video Systems). A team of game designers created the characters and locations, then choreographed Dirk's movements as he encountered the monsters and obstacles in the castle. The art department at AMS created storyboards for each episode as a guide for the final animation. Dyer was inspired by the text game Adventure. This game gave rise to an invention he dubbed "The Fantasy Machine". This device went through many incarnations from a rudimentary computer using paper tape (with illustrations and text) to a system that manipulated a videodisc containing mostly still images and narration. The game it played was a graphic adventure, The Secrets of the Lost Woods.[12] The game's concept as an interactive movie LaserDisc game was inspired by Sega's Astron Belt, which Dyer saw at the 1982 AMOA show.[13]

Attempts to market The Fantasy Machine had repeatedly failed. Allegedly, an Ideal Toy Company representative walked out in the middle of one presentation. Dyer's inspiration allegedly came during his viewing of The Secret of NIMH, whereby he realized he needed quality animation and an action script to bring excitement to his game. He elected to take a reserved but unscripted location from The Secrets of the Lost Woods known as The Dragon's Lair.

The game was animated by veteran Disney animator and The Secret of NIMH director Don Bluth and his studio. Development was done on a shoestring budget, cost US$1.3 million and took seven months to complete. Since the studio could not afford to hire any models, the animators used photos from Playboy magazines for inspiration for the character Princess Daphne.[14] The animators also used their own voices for all the characters instead of hiring voice actors in order to keep costs down, although it does feature one professional voice actor, Michael Rye, as the narrator in the attract sequence (he is also the narrator for Space Ace and Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp). The voice of Princess Daphne was portrayed by Vera Lanpher,[15] who was head of the clean-up department at the time.[16] Dirk the Daring's voice belongs to film editor Dan Molina, who later went on to perform the bubbling sound effects for another animated character, Fish Out of Water, from 2005's Disney film Chicken Little, which he also edited. Dirk shrieks or makes other noises on numerous occasions but speaks words only twice. First, he mutters "Uh, oh" when the platform begins to recede during the fire-swinging sequence, then he exclaims "Wow!" when first entering the Dragon's Lair and laying eyes on the slumbering Princess Daphne. The music and many sound effects were scored and performed by Chris Stone at EFX Systems in Burbank. Bryan Rusenko and Glen Berkovitz were the recording engineers. The 43 second "Attract Loop" was recorded in a straight 18-hour session. Featured instruments, all keyboards, were the E-mu Emulator and Memorymoog.

The original LaserDisc players shipped with the game (Pioneer LD-V1000 or PR-7820) often failed. Although the players were of good quality, the game imposed unusually high strain: LaserDisc players were designed primarily for playing movies, in which the laser assembly would gradually move across the disc as the data was read linearly. However, Dragon's Lair required seeking different animation sequences on the disc every few seconds—indeed, less than a second in some cases—as dictated by gameplay. The high amount of seeking, coupled with the length of time the unit was required to operate, could result in failure of the LaserDisc player after a relatively short time. This was compounded by the game's popularity. As a result, the LaserDisc player often had to be repaired or replaced. The life of the original player's gas laser was about 650 hours; although later models had solid state lasers with an estimated life of 50,000 hours, the spindle motor typically failed long before that. It is rare to find a Dragon's Lair game intact with the original player, and conversion kits have been developed so the units can use more modern players. The original USA 1983 game used a single side NTSC LaserDisc player manufactured by Pioneer; the other side of the disc was metal backed to prevent bending. The European versions of the game were manufactured by Atari[17] under license and used single side PAL discs manufactured by Philips (not metal backed).

The European arcade version of Dragon's Lair was licensed to Atari Ireland (as was Space Ace later). The cabinet design was therefore different from the Cinematronics version. The main differences were that the LED digital scoring panel was replaced with an on screen scoring display appearing after each level. The Atari branding was present in various places on the machine (marquee, coin slots, control panel and speaker grill area), and the machines featured the cone LED player start button used extensively on Atari machines. Although licensing for this region was exclusive to Atari, a number of Cinematronics machines were also available from suppliers mostly via a gray import. The original Fantasy Machine was later released as a prototype video game console known as Halcyon.

Reception

Dragon's Lair initially represented high hopes for the then-sagging arcade industry, fronting the new wave of immersive LaserDisc video games. A quote from Newsweek captures the level of excitement displayed over the game: "Dragon's Lair is this summer's hottest new toy: the first arcade game in the United States with a movie-quality image to go along with the action ... The game has been devouring kids' coins at top speed since it appeared early in July. Said Robert Romano, 10, who waited all day in the crush at Castle Park without getting to play, 'It's the most awesome game I've ever seen in my life.'"[18] Arcade operators at its release reported long lines, even though the game was the first video arcade game to cost 50 cents.[19] Operators were also concerned, however, that players would figure out its unique predefined game play, leading them to "get the hang of it and stop playing it".[20] By July 1983, 1000 machines had been distributed, and there were already a backlog of about 7,500.[20] By the end of 1983 Electronic Games and Electronic Fun were rating Dragon's Lair as the number one video arcade game in USA,[21] while the arcade industry gave it recognition for helping turn around its 1983 financial slump.[22] Dragon's Lair received recognition as the most influential game of 1983, to the point that regular computer graphics looked "rather elementary compared to top-quality animation".[23] By February 1984, it was reported to have grossed over $32 million for Cinematronics.[24] One element of the game that was negatively received was the blackout time in between loading of scenes, which Dyer promised would be eliminated by the forthcoming Space Ace and planned Dragon's Lair sequel.[23] By the middle of 1984, however, after Space Ace and other similar games were released to little success, sentiment on Dragon's Lair's position in the industry had shifted and it was being cited as a failure due to its expensive cost for a game that would "lose popularity".[25] Arcade owners were also displeased with the mechanical unreliability of the LaserDisc drive.[26]

The Commodore 64/128 version of the game was reviewed in 1988 in Dragon #133 by Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser in "The Role of Computers" column. The reviewers gave the game 3 out of 5 stars.[27] GamePro reviewed the Sega CD version in 1994. They commented that the controls require such precise timing that the game can be very frustrating, and criticized the lack of replay value and grainy video quality, but were positive in their assessment of the game, asserting that "Time Gal, Road Avenger, and Sewer Shark are all coy imitators of the best LaserDisc arcade game there ever was... Dragon's Lair!"[28] In 1994 Electronic Gaming Monthly gave the Sega CD version a 6.2 out of 10, criticizing that "pinpoint accuracy" was required to complete the game, making it too frustrating.[29] They gave the 3DO version a 7 out of 10, praising the superior graphics and short load times.[30] They gave the CD-i version a 7.5 out of 10, with all four of their reviewers agreeing it to be the best home version of the game to date.[31]

Next Generation reviewed the CD-i version of the game, rating it two stars out of five, and stated that "People who like the stand-up version or enjoyed any of Don Bluth's other titles [...] will be in heaven, otherwise it's probably bet avoided."[32]

In 2001, GameSpy ranked Dragon's Lair as number 7 on the list of "Top 50 Arcade Games of All-Time".[33] It was one of only three video games (along with Pong and Pac-Man) put in storage at the Smithsonian Institution.[34]

Home versions

Various home computer adaptations of Dragon's Lair were released during the 1980s and 1990s, but because of (at the time) high memory consumption due to the detailed animation of the games, not all scenes from the original game were included. Reviewers of the home computer versions differed widely in their appraisal of the game, with one Amiga magazine awarding 92% due to the unprecedented audio-visual quality,[35] while another magazine gave the same version a score of only 32%, on account of the "wooden" gameplay.[36] This led to Escape from Singe's Castle, a pseudo-sequel where Daphne is kidnapped at the moment of Dirk's victory by a shapeshifter, forcing him to venture even further into the castle to save her again. The game was made up of unused scenes from the LaserDisc version, though some portions (such as the lizard king and mud men) were shortened. The 8-bit versions were created by Software Projects, while ReadySoft handled the 16-bit versions. These used video compression and new storage techniques, but came on multiple 3.5" floppy disks.

In late 2002, to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the original arcade release, Digital Leisure produced a special edition DVD box set containing Dragon's Lair, Space Ace and Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp. All the scenes from the original arcade releases were included and optionally the player could select new scenes that were animated in 1983, but not included in any previous Dragon's Lair release. The games were also updated to include higher quality video, authentic scene order and a new difficulty selection to make it more challenging. Digital Leisure worked with a small independent game developer, Derek Sweet, to release a CD-ROM 4-disc box set for Windows-based PCs.

In the late 2006, Digital Leisure released "Dragon's Lair HD", which features an all-new high-definition transfer from the original negatives (as opposed to just sourcing the LaserDisc). The original mono soundtrack has also been remastered into Dolby Digital 5.1 sound (on PCs that can support it). On April 9, 2007, a Blu-ray version of Dragon's Lair was released. This uses the same HD transfer as the aforementioned PC release, but went through a 6-month process to clean and remaster the image. Dragon's Lair Blu-ray is the first title to fully utilize BD-J technology.[37] In 2013, Dragon's Lair was released on Steam via Steam Greenlight. This iteration of Dragon's Lair features 720p remastered video, remastered game footage, and bonus content.

Dragon's Lair led to the creation of numerous video game ports for home systems. Since some original sequences did not fit in the ports for those systems, they were re-released only in a virtual sequel called Escape from Singe's Castle:

  • A nonlinear arcade interpretation of Dragon's Lair and Escape from Singe's Castle with elements of platform and puzzle was made by Software Projects for 8-bit machines in 1986.
  • A side-scrolling cinematic platformer adaptation of the game was also made for the Nintendo Entertainment System, titled Dragon's Lair.
  • The Game Boy version (entitled Dragon's Lair: The Legend) in particular has almost nothing to do with the source game aside from Dirk as the protagonist, Mordroc as the villain, and saving Princess Daphne as the objective. In fact, the game is a port of a five-year-old ZX Spectrum game, Roller Coaster, the result being a platform game where Dirk has to negotiate a series of thinly-disguised fairground rides. The later Game Boy Color version, however, is a relatively faithful rendition of the original game.
  • Another platformer adaptation of the game was also made for the Super NES, also titled Dragon's Lair.
  • The Dragon's Lair Deluxe Pack was released for home computers containing all the FMVs for all three games. Though it contains all the video including some scenes cut from the North American version of the game, the gameplay was reported as lackluster.
  • ReadySoft ported and released Dragon's Lair for the Macintosh computers on CD-ROM in 1994. A Sega CD version was also released.
  • DAPHNE, an emulator for LaserDisc-based games, can emulate the original 1983 version. DAPHNE requires the ROM files plus the original LaserDisc to run. Alternatively, an MPEG-2 video stream and Ogg Vorbis audio stream can be substituted for the LaserDisc. These streams can be generated from the original LaserDisc or from Digital Leisure's 2002 DVD.
  • In July 2010, the iOS version was released by Electronic Arts on Apple's App Store. The game's graphics have been cleaned up for the iPhone screen.[38]
  • In early 2019, HarmlessLion released Dragon's Lair under a license from Digital Leisure for the TI-99/4A home computer. It was released as a 128MB cartridge playable on the stock console.[39]
Year Platform Media Developer Publisher Notes
1983ArcadeLaserDiscAdvanced Microcomputer SystemsCinematronicsOriginal release
1984Coleco AdamCartridgeColeco
Coleco Adam514" Floppy diskColeco
1986Amstrad CPCCartridgeSoftware Projects
Amstrad CPC514" Floppy diskSoftware Projects
ZX SpectrumCassetteSoftware Projects
Commodore 64CassetteSoftware Projects
1987ZX SpectrumCartridgeSoftware ProjectsBudget release
Amstrad CPCCassetteSoftware ProjectsReleased as Dragon's Lair: Escape from Singe's Castle
Amstrad CPC514" Floppy diskSoftware ProjectsReleased as Dragon's Lair: Escape from Singe's Castle
ZX SpectrumCassetteSoftware ProjectsReleased as Dragon's Lair: Escape from Singe's Castle
Commodore 64CassetteSoftware ProjectsReleased as Dragon's Lair: Escape from Singe's Castle
Commodore 64514" Floppy diskAmazing SoftwareRepublished version includes both cassette versions on a single floppy disk
1989Amiga312" Floppy diskVisionary Design TechnologiesReadySoft
DOS514" Floppy diskSullivan Bluth / Merit Software
DOS312" Floppy diskSullivan Bluth / Merit Software
1990Atari ST312" Floppy diskReadySoftReadySoft
Macintosh Plus/SE312" Floppy diskReadySoft
Amiga312" Floppy diskVisionary Design TechnologiesReadySoftReleased as Dragon's Lair: Escape from Singe's Castle
Nintendo Entertainment SystemCartridgeMotivetimeCSG ImagesoftPlatformer
1991Game BoyCartridgeMotivetimeCSG ImagesoftPlatformer, released as Dragon's Lair: The Legend
Atari ST312" Floppy diskReadySoftReadySoftReleased as Dragon's Lair: Escape from Singe's Castle
DOS312" Floppy diskReadySoftReadySoft
DOS312" Floppy diskReadySoftReadySoftReleased as Dragon's Lair: Escape from Singe's Castle (includes some non-original arcade levels)
DOS312" Floppy diskReadySoftReadySoftReleased as Dragon's Lair: Escape from Singe's Castle
Macintosh312" Floppy diskReadySoftReleased as Dragon's Lair: Escape from Singe's Castle
1993Super NESCartridgeMotivetimeData EastPlatformer
Sega CDCD-ROMEpicenter InteractiveReadySoft
DOSCD-ROMReadySoft
3DOCD-ROMReadySoft
unreleasedSega GenesisCartridgeEden Entertainment SoftwareSega / TaitoWas to be released as The Adventure Continues
1994MacintoshCD-ROMReadySoftReadySoft
CD-ICD-ROMReadySoft
1995Atari Jaguar CDCD-ROMReadySoft
1997Windows 95CD-ROMDigital LeisureReleased as Deluxe Pack (also contained Space Ace and Dragon's Lair II)
WindowsDVDDigital Leisure[40]
1998Home DVD playersDVDDigital Leisure
Windows 98DVDDigital Leisure
2000Game Boy ColorCartridgeDigital EclipseCapcom
PlayStation 2DVDDigital Leisure
2001Windows XPCD-ROMDigital LeisureArcade authentic
XboxDVDDigital Leisure
2002Home DVD playersDVDDigital LeisureReleased as 20th Anniversary Pack
MacintoshDVDDigital Leisure
GameCube GameCube Optical DiscDragonstoneCapcomRemake as Dragons Lair 3D
XboxDVDDragonstoneUbisoftRemake as Dragons Lair 3D
WindowsCD-ROMDragonstoneUbisoftRemake as Dragons Lair 3D
2003Windows XPCD-ROMDigital LeisureReleased as 20th Anniversary Pack
2004PlayStation 2DVDDragonstoneTHQReleased as Dragon's Lair 3D - Special Edition
GameCubeGameCube Optical DiscDragonstoneTHQReleased as Dragon's Lair 3D - Special Edition
2005Mobile PhoneDownloadMMJ GamesStarwave
2006Windows XPDVDDigital LeisureHigh Definition WMV
2007Home Blu-ray playersBD-RInfinite HDDigital Leisure
PlayStation 3BD-RInfinite HDDigital Leisure
Home HD DVD playersHD DVDInfinite HDDigital Leisure
Xbox 360HD DVDDigital Leisure
WindowsDVDDigital Leisure20th Anniversary Pack released on 1 DVD instead of 4 disks
2009iPhoneDownloadDigital LeisureElectronic Arts
Nintendo DSi (DSiWare)DownloadCode MysticsDigital Leisure
2010WiiWii Optical DiscDigital LeisureDestineerReleased as Dragon's Lair Trilogy (includes Dragon's Lair, Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp, and Space Ace)
iPadApp StoreDigital LeisureDragon's Lair LLC
Nintendo DSDS Game CardCode MysticsDestineer
PlayStation NetworkDownloadDigital LeisureDigital Leisure
2011PSPDownloadDigital LeisureDigital Leisure
AndroidDownloadDigital LeisureDigital Leisure
Nintendo 3DSDownloadDigital LeisureDigital Leisure
2012Xbox Live ArcadeDownloadDigital LeisureMicrosoft StudiosKinect-enabled version with Xbox 360 Controller[41]
2013WindowsDownload (Steam)Digital LeisureDigital Leisure
macOSDownload (Steam)Digital LeisureDigital Leisure
2017LinuxDownload (Steam)Digital LeisureDigital Leisure
PlayStation 4Download (PSN)Digital LeisureDigital LeisureReleased as Dragon's Lair Trilogy (includes Dragon's Lair, Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp, and Space Ace)
2019Nintendo SwitchDownload (eShop)Digital LeisureDigital LeisureReleased as Dragon's Lair Trilogy (includes Dragon's Lair, Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp, and Space Ace)
TI-99/4ACartridgeHarmlessLionHarmlessLionLimited run of cartridges produced under a license from Digital Leisure
Xbox OneDownload (Xbox Store)Digital LeisureDigital LeisureReleased as Dragon's Lair Trilogy (includes Dragon's Lair, Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp, and Space Ace)

Cultural references

Dragon's Lair appears in the Stranger Things episode "Chapter One: MADMAX" (2017).[42]

See also

Notes

  1. Some sources erroneously list the release day as June 23,[4] July 1,[5][6] or late July.[7]
  2. Up to 2 players with alternating turns.

References

  1. Bluth, Don; Goldman, Gary (2017-06-19). "Today is the 34th Anniversary of Dragon's Lair!". Dragon's Lair Club. Traditional Animation. Retrieved 2018-09-02. ... after its debut on the 19th of June 1983.
  2. "Dragon's Lair". Steam. Valve. Retrieved 2018-09-02.
  3. "Dragon's Lair Trilogy". GOG.com. CD Projekt. Retrieved 2018-09-02.
  4. "The Big Video Game Anniversaries of 2018". Den of Geek!. New York City: Dennis Publishing. 2018-03-05. Retrieved 2018-09-02.
  5. Dragon's Lair (arcade flyer). The Arcade Flyer Archive. Starcom. 1983. p. 1. Retrieved 2018-09-02.CS1 maint: others (link)
  6. Arnold, Jay (1983-08-19). "Industry Has High Hopes For New Video Games". The Titusville Herald. NewspaperARCHIVE. Retrieved 2014-10-07. ... when it was introduced last month.
  7. Harmetz, Aljean (1983-08-02). "Hollywood Playing Harder at the Video Game". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-10-07. "Dragon's Lair," a coin- operated laser-disk video game with stereophonic sound and real animation, reached arcades two weeks ago...
  8. Dragon's Lair / Space Ace (arcade flyer). The Arcade Flyer Archive. Universal. 1984. p. 2. Retrieved 2018-09-02.CS1 maint: others (link)
  9. "Dragon's Lair - The International Arcade Museum". International Arcade Museum. Retrieved 2012-05-16.
  10. "Dragon's Lair". The International Arcade Museum. Retrieved 5 Oct 2013.
  11. VicSage (2016-09-10). "32 Years Later I Get To Read This Dragon's Lair Storybook!". The Retroist. Retrieved 2018-09-04. While it certainly has plenty of Players who seem to rail against the game...well...being a game on rails,...
  12. Interview with Rick Dyer from Animation World Network
  13. Wolf, Mark J. P. (2008). The Video Game Explosion: A History from PONG to Playstation and Beyond. ISBN 9780313338687.
  14. "Dragon's Lair movie?" Archived 2010-01-13 at the Wayback Machine from Suite101
  15. Vera Pacheco Filmography on IMDb
  16. Behind the Scenes from DonBluth.com
  17. Dragon's Lair (arcade flyer). The Arcade Flyer Archive. Atari Ireland. 1983. p. 2.CS1 maint: others (link)
  18. McGuigan, Cathleen; McAlevey, Peter (8 August 1983). "Mini-Movies Make the Scene". Newsweek. p. 79.
  19. "Local Amusement Facilities Planning To Get Dragon's Lair". Spartanburg Herald-Journal. August 18, 1983.
  20. Turner, Steve (August 5, 1983). "The lair of the new". The Ledger.
  21. Clark, Doug (January 15, 1984). "Ace dragon slayer may make a killing as video-tips writer". The Spokesman-Review.
  22. "Laser disc arcade games could become wave of the future". Gadsden Times. Feb 18, 1984. Retrieved 2013-03-11.
  23. "Graphics are lure in Dragon's Lair". The Milwaukee Sentinel. Feb 1, 1984. Retrieved 2013-03-11.
  24. "Video games demoralize animator". Spokane Chronicle. Feb 29, 1984. Retrieved 2013-03-11.
  25. "Video Games Fizzle Out". Jul 28, 1984. Retrieved 2013-03-11.
  26. "Disc-Based Arcade Games: The Few, the Proud". Next Generation. Imagine Media (10): 27. October 1995.
  27. Lesser, Hartley; Lesser, Patricia; Lesser, Kirk (May 1988). "The Role of Computers". Dragon (133): 46–52.
  28. "ProReview: Dragon's Lair". GamePro (57). IDG. April 1994. p. 40.
  29. "Dragon's Lair Review". Electronic Gaming Monthly (55). EGM Media, LLC. February 1994. p. 42.
  30. "Dragon's Lair Review". Electronic Gaming Monthly (57). EGM Media, LLC. April 1994. p. 44.
  31. "Review Crew: Dragon's Lair". Electronic Gaming Monthly (61). EGM Media, LLC. August 1994. p. 36.
  32. "Finals". Next Generation. No. 2. Imagine Media. February 1995. p. 94.
  33. "GameSpy's Top 50 Arcade Games of All-Time". GameSpy. Retrieved 2013-03-11.
  34. "History of Computing: Video games - Golden Age". Thocp.net. Retrieved 2011-08-14.
  35. "Dragon's Lair review from ST Amiga Format 9 (Mar 1989) - Amiga Magazine Rack". Amr.abime.net. Retrieved 2011-08-14.
  36. "Dragon's Lair review from CU Commodore User Amiga-64 (Mar 1989) - Amiga Magazine Rack". Amr.abime.net. Retrieved 2011-08-14.
  37. Nelson, Carl (2007-04-04). "Dragon's Lair – The first full Blu-Ray Java title reviewed". Hardcoreware.net. Archived from the original on 2010-04-11. Retrieved 2011-08-14.
  38. iTunes
  39. "Dragon's Lair Goes DVD". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 102. Ziff Davis. January 1998. p. 28.
  40. "Dragon's Lair for XBLA! With a Secret!". playxbla.com. Archived from the original on 2012-07-14. Retrieved 2012-03-19.
  41. https://www.avclub.com/come-on-stranger-things-no-one-ever-got-that-far-in-d-1819983547
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