![]() Either way, it was a neat bit of fun in retro computing. It was hard not to get distracted by the graphics and remember to point the rocket the right direction. ![]() We managed to murde-lose a few pilots, but that was about it. ![]() We loaded up his disk image on an Apple II emulator and gave it a try. He has used the language for the ridiculous before. You can build a rocket, select a pilot, launch, and if you’re lucky (or skilled), reach orbit. The real story, and hack, being that he wrote a version of KSP for the Apple II in Applesoft Basic. Well, that’s the narrative proposed by on his YouTube channel. Finding himself in an alternate timeline where KSP had been released for the Apple II, he brought back a copy. ![]() Tried to use his time machine to jump a few years in the future to get a less buggy version of Kerbal Space Program, but as usual with time travel, nothing went right and he ended up heading to 1987.
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