Mel Croucher (born 1948) is a British entrepreneur and video games pioneer. Originally an architect, he moved into computers and in 1977 launched one of the very earliest games companies,[1] Automata UK, as an extension of his publishing business. He is now credited for setting up "the first games company in the U.K.",[2] celebrated as "the father of the British videogames industry"[3] and presented as "a pioneer in affective computing".[4] His first broadcasts of computer game software were made over AM and FM radio.[1] After the release of the Sinclair ZX81,[5] his label published several games for the early home computer market, including three Computer Trade Association award-winners: Pimania (1982), Groucho (1983, a.k.a. My Name Is Uncle Groucho, You Win A Fat Cigar), and the groundbreaking[6] "multi-media" title Deus Ex Machina (1984).

Mel Croucher
Born1948 (age 75–76)
NationalityBritish
Occupation(s)Entrepreneur, writer, video game designer
Known forimmersive entertainment pioneer

Croucher has championed immersive entertainment throughout his career as director and producer, mixing audio, video, spoken word, real-world locations and computer-generated effects. He is currently Executive Chairman of the Jeeni streamed entertainment channel.[7]

Career

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Croucher has written text books, computer manuals and comedy, and worked as a journalist, writing regular columns like Without Prejudice, The Rubber Room, and the comedy sci-fi serial Tamara Knight for the ZX Spectrum magazine CRASH in the 1980s,[8] as well as columns for various computer magazines since.[citation needed]

Mel Croucher is the author of Zygote in Computer Shopper every month since Issue 1 in 1988[9] and the Mel's World column and the Great Moments In Computing cartoon strip in the same magazine.

In 2010, Feeding Tube Records in the United States released "Pimania: The Music of Mel Croucher", a deluxe vinyl LP album of the music to the Pimania games, as well as tracks from other Automata releases. The album came with extensive liner notes by Croucher and Caroline Bren, as well as a large poster featuring selections from the original Automata print campaigns. A six-album retrospective of his music complete works was released in 2017 by The Games Collector.[citation needed]

In 2012, Mel Croucher reformed Automata as Automata Source Ltd., with leading figures from the video games, online marketing and music industries.[citation needed] He produced a reimagination of Deus Ex Machina, starring Sir Christopher Lee, released in 2015 as Deus Ex Machina 2,[10] alongside a 30th Anniversary Collector's Edition of the original game including new graphics and a director's commentary. He collaborated with Christopher Lee on several other games titles, and their game for children was released as Eggbird in the same year.[citation needed]

Mel Croucher is Executive Chairman of Jeeni, the global streamed music service and artist development platform, which he co-founded with Dr Shena Mitchell in 2017.[11]

Video games

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  • The Pathfinder Quests (1977-1980)
  • Whitbread Quiz Time and the Computer Treasure Hunt (1979)
  • The Adventures of Willi Nilli (1981)
  • The Portsmouth Tapes (1981)
  • In The Best Possible Taste (1981)
  • Can Of Worms (1981)
  • Love And Death (1982)
  • The Bible (1982)
  • Pimania (1982)
  • Dragon Doodles & Demos (1983)
  • Spectrum Spectacular (1983)
  • Bunny/ETA (1983) - Croucher wrote the ETA portion of the game.
  • Yakzee (1983)
  • My Name Is Uncle Groucho, You Win A Fat Cigar (1983)
  • Pi-Eyed (1984)
  • Olympimania (1984)
  • Deus Ex Machina (1984)
  • iD (1986)
  • Castle Master (1990) story and book of the game
  • Deus Ex Machina 2 (2015)
  • Deus Ex Machina 30th Anniversary Collector's Edition (2015)
  • Eggbird (2015)

Books and journalism

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  • Namesakes, with Jon Pertwee, Sphere Books
  • Easy AMOS, Europress
  • AMOS Professional, Europress
  • Email Direct Marketing, (2000) Institute of Practitioners in Advertising, ISBN 1841160555
  • European Computer Trade Yearbook (as Editor)
  • Sam Coupé User Guide, Miles Gordon Technology
  • Devil's Acre, Acorn Books[12]
  • Deus Ex Machina - The Best Game You Never Played In Your Life, (2014) Acorn Books,[13] ISBN 1783336935
  • Great Moments In Computing (2017), Acorn Books, ISBN 9781785387579
  • Last Orders: What You're Worth and Who Benefits When You Die (2017), AG Books, ISBN 1785386417
  • Pibolar Disorder (2018), Acorn Books, ISBN 9781785388330
  • Short Pants (2018), Acorn Books, ISBN 9781785388309
  • Great Moments The Complete Edition (2022), Acorn Books, ISBN 9781789829242
  • Mundaneum (2024), Extremis Publishing, ISBN 9781739484569
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References

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  1. ^ a b Lean, Tom (2016). Electronic Dreams: How 1980s Britain Learned to Love the Computer. Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1-4729-1833-8.
  2. ^ Colin Campbell, The one-hour life of a 1980s video game auteur, Polygon, 25 September 2013
  3. ^ Dan Wood, The Father of The British Videogames Industry, Mel Croucher – The Retro Hour, episode 50, 16 December 2016
  4. ^ "What is the future of the Internet? – A Discussion between Emmanuel Legeard and Mel Croucher". Cerebrum. April 2017.
  5. ^ "Mel Croucher interview - The Spectrum Golden Years". zxgoldenyears.net. Archived from the original on 10 March 2007.
  6. ^ "Deus Ex Machina (review)". Your Spectrum. No. 10. Dennis Publishing. 1984.
  7. ^ "Team - Jeeni". jeeni.com. Retrieved 1 June 2024.
  8. ^ "Tamara Knight Issue 1". CRASH Online. Newsfield. Retrieved 23 May 2006.
  9. ^ "Anniversary Update" Computer Shopper Magazine, issue 360, page 8, February 2018, ISSN 0955-8578, accessed 7 February 2022
  10. ^ "Home". deusexmachina2.com.
  11. ^ "Home". jeeni.com.
  12. ^ "Devil's Acre » Acorn Books".
  13. ^ "Deus Ex Machina » Acorn Books".