Page last updated: 13/12/2011, 10:55 pm

'PARANOID PETE'
1984 Ubik Software

Review / Scan / Back

   

Credits
Code -
Rob Hubbard

Music -
Rob Hubbard

Graphics -
Rob Hubbard

   
 
 
 


Game

 
 
 
 
 

Paranoid Pete is a space harvesting action game which was released on the Spectrum way back in 1984. Personal Computer Games advertised the game and clearly you can see that a Commodore 64 version was in the pipeline.

Although the spectrum version did surface and get a release, the C64 version never quite made it due to Ubik going under due to all the problems that occured. Hedning recently found the reason why in Popular Computing Weekly 6-12 Sept 1984:

"Weetabix acts against Ubik

TYNESIDE company Ubik’s game Paranoid Pete will not now be appearing in the shops. Weetabix complained that the characters portrayed in the game resembled its own ‘Weetabix men’ used in advertising too closely.

“When we first started work on Paranoid Pete we were working in collusion with Weetabix to produce a game based on their characters,” said Ubik’s marketing director Danielle Allan. “But when the game was complete, Weetabix weren’t happy with the result. “In order to be able to bring out a game ourselves, we changed many aspects of it, but Weetabix were not satisfied and it has now been shelved.

However, Ubik do have two more games scheduled for release in October. Razzmatazz is based on the ITV children’s programme of the same name, to be brought out under licence on the Spectrum, with a Commodore 64 version to follow, and a comical game for the BBC provisionally entitled The Professor. Both are expected to be priced around £5.95."

So shortly after being released on the shelves, Ubik were ordered to stop selling the game... Was the C64 version even in production when Ubik were told to stop?

Rob Hubbard in a video interview once mentioned that he programmed a game which featured the Weetabix character, which the company didn't get permission to use and hence the game was scrapped.

Considering that Rob also coded a game called Razzmatazz, and that Ubik were based in Tyneside ... it is pretty much certain that Rob Hubbard was behind the C64 conversion of this game. We are awaiting final confirmation, but would be very surprised if it is not the famous man himself behind it. In which case, it is unlikely that Rob will have the game - as he didn't keep hold of his tapes/disks from that time.

We may have to find someone from Ubik or another developer who may have something.

Promising leads and tie ups, but do you know any more on the conversion?

Frank.
(Additional source credits - Peter Weighill, Hedning)

 
 

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