Lisa



"Apple invents the personal computer. Again."

Back in the early 80s, Apple knew that graphical interfaces were the future, so they had a big project for that. The Lisa was very advanced for a personal computer at the time, with modern features like multitasking and protected memory. However, that brought its downfall: it cost a whooping $9,995 (over $26,000 adjusted for inflation), not unreasonable for a graphics workstation but exorbitant for a home computer. Also, it was a sluggish machine because the operating system was too sophisticated for the hardware.

Since the Lisa was a flop, Apple went for their "plan B" the following year: the Macintosh, a simpler machine that they could sell for a quarter of that price.

Given the high price and poor sales, very few games exist. Most are homebrew games made in recent years. There were a few unofficial ports from the Macintosh including Lode Runner and Vegas slots, which were probably made by rich computer enthusiasts with nothing better to do with their lives.