Dragon Quest
United Kingdom
Bug-Byte Software (developer and publisher)
Released 1982 for BBC Micro
Date Started: 3 July 2026
Date Ended: 3 July 2026
Total Hours: 3
Difficulty: Easy (2.0/5)
Final Rating: (to come later)
Ranking at time of posting: (to come later) It's been tough to identify the first British CRPG given that so many of the early efforts from the country are best described as "proto-RPGs." They have some RPG elements like exploration, inventory, and battle, but they tend to lack character development, whether traditional experience and leveling or some kind of skill-based system.
With Dragon Quest (obviously no relation to the more famous Japanese title), we have a game drawn more solidly from Dungeons & Dragons tradition than any British game before it, or for years after it. It has attributes, experience, and the concept of levels—but you never actually level. Or, more accurately, you win the game by achieving Level 2.
The backstory asks you to enter the dungeon, kill a dragon who has been terrorizing the local populace, and escape. Character creation rolls a standard set of D&D attributes on a typical scale of 3-18 (no percentile strength). You can re-roll as often as you want. I always got the same sets of values in the same order, so the game must start with the same seed (although in the past we've learned that such problems are often caused by emulator issues). When the player is satisfied, he chooses between (W)arrior and (M)agician, with consequent restrictions on the items that he can use. (Magicians are limited to daggers and no armor; warriors can't use the spells.) El Explorador de RPG discovered that the game also allows you to select (T)hief and (C)leric; the author must have planned for these options before abandoning them. The game treats you as if you chose "Warrior" if you pick either of these.
The character is then given a random amount of money and allowed to purchase from a list of 16 items, including three expensive single-use spells ("Protect," "Healing," and "Sleep"), various weapons and armor, torches, lanterns, and rations (which heal). El Explorador's inspection of the code shows that while armor does matter for protective value, the choice of weapon has no bearing on success; the game only checks whether you have one, not what it is. High dexterity or charisma (!) add to the attack bonus. The only attribute visible during the game itself is what the game calls "strength" but is really hit points rather than the strength from the character creation screen. Again, I owe El Explorador for analyzing the math on the strength total: It starts at 1d4 for magicians and 1d8 for warriors, with bonuses and penalties for high or low constitution, wisdom (magicians), and strength (warriors).
Once you're done shopping, you're thrust into an irregularly-shaped dungeon of about 200 rooms. It has a fixed layout, including the same monsters and items in the rooms every time. Each room has a name (e.g., "Narrow Corridor"; "Dusty Chamber; " "Rubbly Room"), and—provided you turn on a light source—you're given a quasi-first-person view, if your character was looking at an angle from the ceiling. You can return to the shop at any time, which is a good idea if your health is too low.
Commands in the dungeon include (M)ove (followed by a direction), (T)ake, DRINK, EAT, ON and OFF (for torches and lamps), LOOK, READ a spell scroll, set an enemy on FIRE with a flask of oil, and FLY if you have the broom. You can (L)isten for enemies in any of the movable directions.
Each room can have a monster or treasure or both. Treasures include magic weapons (which provide no bonus but produce their own light, saving your inventory space for other things), spell scrolls, gold, potions, and a few special items. These include a flaming sword (which does provide an attack bonus, but only with another weapon), a flying broom that lets you jump to another part of the dungeon, and a mirror which seems to do nothing at all.
This is the full monster list: giant centipedes, lone orcs, stirges, gelatinous cubes, huge spiders, bugbears, "minotors," troglodytes, displacer beasts, grey oozes, black puddings, and cockatrices. There are also two brass dragons in the dungeon, although the quest only requires you to kill one. If any of these creatures have special attacks or defenses—or indeed even vary in difficulty—I didn't experience it. There's text in the file about the dragon breathing fire, but that didn't occur in any of my battles against them.
If both a monster and a treasure are in the same room, the game says that the monster is "guarding" the treasure. You can still often snatch it up and escape without a battle.
Combat is usually initiated by the player, sometimes the monster. It occurs in rounds, with the player choosing to (S)trike or (R)un each round and then finding the result as well as the monster's counterattack. Each successful hit by a monster, whatever the type, reduces the character's strength by 1, so if death comes, the player should have seen it coming.
One fun alternative to starting combat with the (F)ight command is to light your enemies on FIRE with a flask of oil. This often immediately kills the enemy.
I thought I would enjoy the process of exploration and mapping, but a few factors make it a nuisance:
- Your view of the dungeon room doesn't give you any directionality. You have to keep track of which direction you entered from to interpret the directions you can leave.
- Some of the door openings are actually teleporters that take you to a random part of the dungeon. You don't know this has happened until your map stops lining up, unless you try to turn around and go back after every step you take.
- Even when you don't get teleported, sometimes the map doesn't line up because the rooms take up more than one "square." Some take up two squares in a row horizontally or vertically; some take up three in an "L" shape. You really can't tell until your map goes wonky, and even then, it's pretty tough to untangle.
But while the game may be hard to map, it's relatively easy to win, mostly because few battles are necessary. You can run through the dungeon picking up gold and special items, then go back to the store for healing rations and (if you're a magician) spells. Both dragons are relatively close to the entrance—nine moves for one and a dozen for the other. Once you've killed at least one dragon, you just have to amass a combined 1,000 points in gold and enemy kills. As long as you monitor your health and don't engage when it's low, you probably won't die.
One exception to the above statement has to do with potions. It's another annoying mechanic. There are about half a dozen of them in the dungeon, and what they do is the result of a random roll when you try to drink them (not when you pick them up). They can heal, turn you invisible, change you into a "gaseous form" and move you to a different part of the dungeon, or increase your strength. They can also be potions of these things and fail to work. And finally, they can be poison and kill you instantly. Overall, it's not worth the risk. Iron rations are a surer thing.
The denouement is disappointing. Once you have at least one dragon kill and 1,000 points, you leave the dungeon and the game says: "You have qualified." It then freezes on that screen. "Qualified." What a superlative! Qualified for what, you may ask? The manual promises that after you complete the main quest, "the ability to move onto Level 2 will appear." It did not appear for me. Level 2, meanwhile, is "available from any good software retailers." Issues of Personal Computing Today in 1983 were indeed offering it for sale, but if it ever existed, it's been lost.
The manual doesn't offer any credit for the game except the letters "P. T. O.," which I suppose might be initials. Liverpool-based Bug-Byte was founded in 1979 by Tony Baden and Tony Milner, and the company cranked out dozens of titles, almost all action games, for the ZX81, ZX Spectrum, Acorn Atom, BBC Micro, Commodore VIC-20, and Commodore 64. A lot of their published games were arcade conversions of titles like Pac-Man, Galaga, and Space Invaders. Perhaps their most well-known games were Matt Smith's Manic Miner (1983), an influential platformer, and Trevor Hall's Twin Kingdom Valley (1983), a graphical adventure. Dragon Quest is the only title that anyone categorizes as an RPG. The company went bankrupt in 1985, and its name and logo were purchased by Argus Press for its low-budget releases, which lasted through 1989.
I can't help but wonder if the game might have had some influence on Dragonsbane (1983), from Quicksilva, which was coincidentally also later purchased by Argus Press. I had a two-hour Zoom call with the authors of Dragonsbane last year (I never got around to editing it for publication) and they didn't mention the earlier game, but there are clear similarities in the action, the items you can find in the dungeon, and the look and shape of the game map. Dragonsbane is a more advanced game in most other ways, although it doesn't have a character creation process. It also randomizes its content while in Dragon Quest, the dungeon is fixed.
I give the game a 15 on the GIMLET, with its best score (3) in "Economy," no score for "NPCs," and 1s and 2s in everything else. At least it shows some awareness of Dungeons & Dragons conventions, which is rare for this particular year and country.
****
For further reading:
- El Explorador de RPGs coverage of the game, including a full map.
- Dragonsbane (1983), the one game that I think may have been influenced by this one.
07/03/2026




















































