User avatar
intric8
Seattle, WA, USA

Posted Sat Jan 23, 2021 3:08 pm

Loadstar was a magazine-on-disk monthly publication produced in Shreveport, Louisiana, that served the Commodore 64 and 128 computer user base. It officially ran from 1987 - 2007 and was under the ownership of Softdisk, which also produced disk mags for the IBM PC, Apple and Macintosh computers. Loadstar, however, was the longest running publication of the bunch.

Loadstar provided an affordable and easy-to-use platform for Commodore users to get lots of carefully vetted high-quality software, tools and information. Contents included applications for education, games, graphics, utilities and more, all within its unique and very cool graphical "operating system" that continuously evolved and improved over time.
IMG_1426.jpg
Some of my Loadstar issues from the very early days, pre-Fender Tucker's involvement at Loadstar.

IMG_1429.jpg
My earliest (#8) was a single disk and not much else, while later issues came with quite a bit of paper listing the disk contents, subscription fliers, 2 disks front and back filled, and even stickers to mail back dead disks at no cost to the customer.



Possibly one of the greatest names for a C64 mag, it chose its moniker from the way we most commonly load our disks:

Code: Select all

Load “*”,8,1

Load that star, baby.

Rather than being a “cover disk” bundled with a typical paper magazine, Loadstar literally was the magazine in its entirety. It originally shipped on 5.25” floppy disks with programs on both sides primarily for the Commodore 64, although 128 programs and disks were also offered. In the mid-to-late 90s Loadstar would also make the move to 1581 compatible 3.5” disks as well.
IMG_1435.JPG
A very early days yet very cool menu-driven Loadstar Table of Contents. You navigate using the cursor keys or a joystick.

IMG_1446.JPG
Some issues would come with C128 software as well. In this issue, the single 128 program would autoboot when used with a C128 computer (a glorious feature of many 128 native programs).


Fender Tucker was the Managing Editor for Loadstar from 1989-2000, covering disk mags #47 - 199. Loadstar would continue to produce disks up to issue #250 after Mr. Tucker’s departure.

The following is an interview and correspondence I shared with Mr. Tucker over the course of last few months (July 2020 - Jan 2021).

If you would like to purchase a vast Loadstar archive, which covers issues 1 - 199, you can pick it up for only $15 here. I describe in detail what it includes at the end of this article.

Fender Tucker also provided two biographical essays, one of which is the perfect place to start.


--


HOW THE TOWER CAME TO BE
by Fender Tucker
August, 2020

I first heard about LOADSTAR soon after I bought a Commodore 64 back in 1984. I had hated computers in general back then because I had to take some computer classes back in the late 70s when I fitfully attended New Mexico State University, majoring in Electronic Technology. A “computer” was a building where I had to take IBM punchcards and wait with a bunch of nerds for the IBM 360 to process them. What a waste of time! I had one of the best jobs of my life at the time, playing guitar in the house band at the Las Cruces Inn, and since computers had nothing to do with my interests, (sex, dope and books), I was happy to have nothing to do with them.

Then, around 1981, my little brother John bought an Apple and convinced me that they were the greatest little puzzle machine ever invented. With a computer you could invent your own puzzles, program it to present the puzzle without revealing the answer, and then keep score for you afterwards. It was like having a friend with the same interests as you, but without a pesky ego to get in the way.

I bought the first computer under $100, a Timex Sinclair 1000. I must have been really desperate for an egoless friend because I actually liked it. Then I got a Commodore VIC-20 for about $200 and eventually a Commodore 64 for about $300. I never thought of them as a tool to communicate with or make life more organized—as we think of computers now—but only as something to be programmed. And I never thought that there was any way other than BASIC to program them.

I was getting burned out on music in the early 80s. My back was killing me from holding the guitar for five hours a night and the rewards of guitar-picking were dwindling. The babes preferred the young guys with the cocaine more than they did the old, bald guy with the pained look on his face, sitting on the bandstand in between songs.

Instead I was spending all my time writing programs and trying to find new techniques. One of my first programs, after learning how to use a custom font on the C-64, was called BATTLE OF THE CHROMOSOMES. It was colorful, catchy-looking, and unpredictable. You set up a screen full of “germs” and let them eat each other until one eventually won. My friend Kathy Delaney would come over and watch TV while I programmed and she was quite familiar with the colorful little squigglies on the screen even though she wasn’t really interested in computers at all.

Around this time I heard there was a magazine on disk called LOADSTAR which would buy programs from guys like me and publish them. So I sent them BATTLE OF THE CHROMOSOMES—and never heard anything back. No big deal. I was used to playing LODE RUNNER and the text adventure games of Scott Adams and knew my modest little program wasn’t in their league.

But one day I got a package in the mail while Kathy was there and when I opened it up, it was a plastic “blister-pack” with a LOADSTAR cover and disk inside. And on the cover was a microscope showing my little squigglies! Even Kathy was impressed. It said “CREEPING CHROMOSOMES — Mean genes in a life-like game of genetics”. And my name was on the back cover!


I wrote LOADSTAR and told them how flattered I was that they used my game, and asked if there might be some payment for the game. There was an embarrassed reply and a check for $100 or so. I honestly can’t remember. I didn’t care about the money. I was a published programmer.

So I sent them some more of my games. MURDER IN THE MUSEUM and MURDER IN THE MONASTERY, two text adventure games, as well as a few simple puzzles. I got back a long, long letter from a “Jim Weiler” critiquing everything I sent in detail. He said my games weren’t very good, but that they had something that was sorely lacking in 90% of the stuff submitted to LOADSTAR: imagination. That was good enough for me. I wanted to be a programmer.

I also got a letter from someone else at Softdisk, the parent company of LOADSTAR, asking me if I could write some “Alfredo” games for the Commodore, which were quite popular on the Apple IIe computer. A disk was enclosed with some Apple files. I took them to a friend who had an Apple and looked at them. Graphic cartoons—and I knew diddly about graphics. All I knew was the font-manipulating trick I used in CHROMOSOMES.

Then I received a form letter from Softdisk saying they were looking for an Apple editor. I called the company and talked to a man named Al Vekovius, one of the co-owners. I admitted I knew nothing about the Apple, or graphics, but I appreciated his offer. He said they were also looking for a Commodore 64 editor and I started to mumble that I’m afraid I don’t know enough to be an editor, but instead asked, “Hmmm. How much does the job pay?” I had always made about $9K a year playing in the band and lived from week to week as any musician did.

Al said, “Oh, $20 thousand a year.”

Yeeooow! I told him I’d get back to him and, after scrunching up my courage, called Softdisk back saying I’d love to come to work for them as a Commodore editor. I assured them I could do the job. Just as I had assured the US Army that I could type and drive a car when I was drafted back in 1967—and couldn’t.

They sent me a check to fly out to Shreveport LA for an interview. I was met at the airport by co-owner Jim Mangham and he showed me a little of the town, including a big old house on Gladstone Boulevard in the Highland district that he and his wife, Judi, had just moved into and were fixing up. Al and Jim and Judi, as well as Jim Weiler, took me out to dinner and apparently I answered their questions satisfactorily. Later on I found that they were actually kind of desperate to get someone to take over the Commodore magazine because all of their interests were in the new IBM magazine, BIG BLUE DISK.

I said all my goodbyes in Las Cruces and packed my station wagon full of computers and clothes and drove from one of my favorite cities, home of the best Mexican food in the world, across the godawfully large state of Texas to Shreveport, where Taco Bell reigned. I was very nervous about Shreveport because in the 50s my mother and three brothers used to drive through it every summer on our way to visit with my grandparents in Thibodaux LA, deep in Cajun country. Before I-40 was built, US Highway 80 wended its way through the worst parts of Shreveport and we always considered it to be the ugliest city we’d ever seen.

But I soon found that it had changed quite a bit from the 50s and was really quite beautiful. Especially the Highland district, where two years later, after Jim and Judi had split up and she and I had married, I joined her in the big old house on Gladstone Boulevard. The house that was to become Ramble House.


--


Fender Tucker Interview, January 2021

AmigaLove's questions, conducted by Eric Hill (aka intric8), are in bold.


First off, thanks for taking the time to do this interview.

I’ve read you were originally a musician for many years before entering the publishing world (with a first name of Fender - that almost seems too cool to be true). Can you describe how you originally got into computers? 

 
I was not a fan of “computers” in 1975 when I went to college after 3 years in the army. It meant going to the computer center, typing code on punchcards, waiting for the IBM 360 (or whatever) to compile and run the program, and debugging it. But around 1980 my little brother John bought an Apple computer and argued that with your own computer all the hassles of the computer center were gone. The computer was a machine that you could program to keep secrets from you and challenge you to find them. An egoless friend or foe. So I bought a Timex Sinclair 1000 when the price dipped to $99. Then a VIC-20 and by 1984 I had a Commodore 64.
 

You started working for SoftDisk back in 1987 under the sister publication of Loadstar. Can you describe what SoftDisk the company was like when you arrived, and how you got the job? What roles did you have, and from when to when?
 
I started at LOADSTAR in August of 1987 as the Managing Editor. I had nothing to do with the other magazines, Softdisk for the Apple II, Big Blue Disk for the IBM and later, Diskworld for the Mac. LOADSTAR #42 had just been published and for the next 157 months or so we cranked out issues. Mike Maynard and Jim Row did just about all of Issue #43 as I watched and learned. By 1989 Mike and Jim had left for PC work and Jeff Jones, from Gary, IN, and Scott Resh were assisting me. I believe it was around 2000 that we got to Issue #199 and Dave Moorman took over with further issues. 
FenderTucker-Loadstar-June1989.jpg
Scott Resh (background) and Fender Tucker (foreground) in the Loadstar offices. Note the mag covers on the wall. Before Jeffrey Jones became the ML programmer, Resh was the go-to guy for code and graphics. He was the GEOS guru. He eventually would move on the out Mac disk magazine, Diskworld.

 

At a high level, can you describe what Loadstar was for those here who might not have heard of it before? 
 
Softdisk was actually innovative. There were home computers and a few utilities and games for them but users were so starved for programs that they would actually type the code in from magazines. I typed a few in my day. So Jim Mangham, a PC programmer and inventor from Shreveport, LA, got the idea of typing in programs, saving them on a disk, and mailing the disk to subscribers. Great idea, but in 1981 5.25 in disks were expensive. So expensive that subscribers were expected to somehow store the programs and then send the disk back to be copied over with the next month’s programs.
 
Thankfully, I didn’t get on board until after the price of disks in bulk dropped and users could keep the disks. I don’t know if LOADSTAR ever was done this way. 
 

How often was Loadstar published and what physical forms did it take? 
 
LOADSTAR was always a monthly and started out on one 5.25” disk (both sides). By #45 there had been a couple of two-disk issues and by #46, I think, they were all two-disk issues. As soon as 3.5” disks became standard, we offered LOADSTAR on them, and added extra stuff from time to time. 
 

Was Loadstar offered at retail brick-and-mortar bookstores (e.g. Waldenbooks, B. Dalton, etc.) or other newsstands? How did customers find Loadstar to purchase it and/or subscribe? Do you recall how much it cost? 
 
I heard about LOADSTAR through a Commodore magazine, RUN or Compute! By the time I became Managing Editor it had slowed down to a trickle in bookstores but apparently it was featured prominently in 1984-1986 at computer stores. In 1993 (I think) I went to a World of Commodore convention in Los Angeles and at a snazzy newsstand in Hollywood I found some LOADSTARs for sale. We used to advertise in Commodore-related computer magazines, but that slowed down soon after I took over.
 
Wasn’t LOADSTAR always around $79 a year? You’d think I would remember but I don’t. [AL: According to some of my paperwork, I've since discovered it was offered at $69/year in 1987, but this price may have changed over time. It was also offered in various tiers of 6 months, 12 months and 2 years.]


Did Loadstar have a market outside the United States? 
 
We did, especially in Canada, Great Britain, Australia and Germany, I think. By the mid-90s, Doreen Horne of Australia and Lee Novak of Canada knew more about the inner workings of our “presenter” (as we called it) than I did. 

   
How were the actual disks produced? 
 
The disks were bought in bulk and there were times when some batches were more error-prone than others, but those problems weren’t mine. At peak times in the early 90s, when LOADSTAR’s subscriber numbers were around 20,000 and the other magazines’ even more, there would be stations with one person feeding up to a dozen fast-copy machines. A disk would take less than a minute to copy so the worker was like an automaton in Metropolis, inserting, ejecting, sleeving and watching one’s soul drain into the swamp.
 

Loadstar seemed to be one part newsletter, one part software distributor. How did you find and select the software you wanted to put into an issue of Loadstar? How much of the software was produced in-house versus public domain? 
 
By the time I took over in 1987 LOADSTAR was pretty well-known by the best programmers in the US. So every week I received a half-dozen or so “submissions”, of which a few showed promise and some were almost ready to go. At first Mike, Jim and I only checked programs for errors but by the time Jeff [Jones] and Scott [Resh] were hired we were much more comfortable with giving all programs a LOADSTAR look and modifying them. I never liked the standard C64 font and we always used our own, which fit into boxes better. In fact, I considered the 6502’s font handling so powerful I insisted all graphics be different from the ones easily created using the built-in C64 font. 
 
We rarely published stuff that was in the public domain until Jeff Jones started internetting around. The coders in Europe were coming up with all kinds of catchy “demos” that were all in machine language and if he found a good one, we would use it.

 
Fender and JButterfield.png
At one of the SWRAP expos from possibly the late 90's, attendee David Witmer (middle) bumped into these two guys: Fender Tucker (left), and Jim Butterfield (right).




Was Loadstar created on Commodore Computers? 
 
100%, although Jeff used his PC for the LOADSTAR Letter. I used a C64 when I started at Softdisk but one day Judi [Mangham, co-founder of Softdisk] and I were in a Sears and saw a C128 for $300 or so. Business was good at the time and I said I want a new computer and Softdisk paid for it. By 1997 there were dozens of C64s and maybe 10 C128s on the shelves in the storeroom.
 
 
Do you recall what the largest circulation for Loadstar was at its peak, and when that was? What was the largest revenue Loadstar generated in a given year? 
 
20,000 was about the most monthly subscribers we ever had. 1992? As mentioned elsewhere the first meeting I ever attended at Softdisk, Al Vekovius, the boss, introduced me as the new Managing Editor of LOADSTAR then proceeded to announce that the magazine was “failing”. Compared to the PC magazine it was, but it was considered a cash cow because our expenses (salaries, equipment) were much less than the other magazines’.
 
One day around 1990 Al Vekovius said to me conspiratorially, “Guess what? Softdisk has more than a million dollars in the bank!” But other than that I have no idea what our revenue was. I was paid $20K in 1987 and was raised to $30K by 1992. For the previous 25 years, when I was a guitar picker in bar bands I was lucky to make $10K a year so my LOADSTAR years were my gravy years.
 

What was the largest your team got back in the heyday of the Commodore 64 and 128 market?

Around 1988 Al told us in a meeting to keep our eyes out for good programmers. Mike Maynard and Jim Row were moving to other magazines so I took him at his word. Jeff Jones, a programmer from Gary IN who had won a LOADSTAR programming contest, seemed like a good candidate so I offered him the same deal I had received a couple of years before. He and his family moved down and Jeff became an integral part of the magazine. He learned machine language and designed a new presenter. Then I asked Scott Resh, who was brashly confident on the phone, to join in and he moved from New England, I believe. He turned out to be an ML wiz and wrote many tools for Jeff and me to use in our BASIC programs.  
 

Did SoftDisk (and/or Loadstar) fashion themselves to be a software and game development house? Can you talk about when the guys at id Software (John Romero, John Carmack) joined SoftDisk, and what the hope for that relationship was at the time? 
 
We never had any ambition other than to keep making LOADSTARs as long as possible. Al and Judi liked the fact that LOADSTAR was a consistent cash cow, but any ambitions were for the PC or Mac magazines.
 
I never talked much with Romero or Carmack while they were there. The Softdisk meetings were filled with complaints about missed deadlines and one day I suggested that we scale back our programs to fit the schedule and Carmack said, “We don’t think that way.” I never knew the whole story about the id guys. The book about them (Masters of Doom?) has a very short description of the brouhaha. The id guys came up with a brilliant marketing strategy and game and left the company just before it took off. They got the Ferraris and fame but LOADSTAR wasn’t affected. I never liked Ferraris.

 
Did Loadstar, or SoftDisk, ever create disk mags for Commodore’s Amiga product line? If not, do you recall why? 
 
Yes, Softdisk had an Amiga magazine planned. But was there ever an issue? I don’t remember.

 
Can you describe how Loadstar was spun off from SoftDisk, and how you came to co-own the property? When did that happen?
 
It was like an episode of As the World Turns. Judi and Jim Mangham had a dust-up about six months after I started working and got divorced. Al Vekovius dropped a hint that maybe somebody ought to keep Judi company and I had been thinking about it for a while anyway, so we went to a New Years’ Eve party at George Leritte’s, a PC programmer. The rest is history. When Softdisk dissolved in the mid 90s LOADSTAR was still doing well enough to keep me and Judi on a payroll. Jeff left sometime in the late 90s, I think.
 
We called the new company J&F Publishing, and you can probably check my dates by looking on the issues. I’m guessing about a lot of the dates.
 
I read in the “Y2K Loadstar Letter #76” that the newsletter was put to bed at that point in the year 2000 and moved entirely to the website and disk formats. What became of Mr. Jeff Jones, author of the newsletter, at that point? 
 
I hope Jeff can supply this info. [Jeff was unavailable to respond at the time this was published, but has since allowed the use of some of his photos]

 
Do you still keep in touch with any of your colleagues from Loadstar and SoftDisk? 
 
Jim Weiler, an Apple programmer who started at Softdisk at its onset in 1981 (I think), has been my partner at Ramble House since the beginning. He invented the RH process and in my opinion, we were one of the first print-on-demand companies in the world. Dan Tobias lives in Boca Raton, I think. The Vekoviuses are back in Shreveport and if this virus ever lets up, we will drive up there and visit them.

 
Do you have a personal favorite issue of Loadstar that you think back on fondly or are most proud of producing? 
 
My favorite programs were by Jon Mattson, Lee Novak, Johnny Harris, Barbara Schulak. Graphics by Walt Harned. Music by Dave Marquis. If I were to scan LOADSTAR Compleat I would find many more who deserve mention. There’s a game that I adapted. The mechanics of the game were taken from a book by Raymond Smullyan, but the theme was based on Philip Jose Farmer’s World of Tiers series. It’s called Veil of Tiers and the graphics were done by Walt Harned. The game turned out to be better than I expected and actually has some strategy to it. I can’t remember which issue it was on.
 
 
Were you with the company when SoftDisk decided to expand its product line to include becoming an ISP (internet service provider) and web host? If so, how did that transformation come about? 
 
I knew nothing about this. I used to doodle in meetings (for maybe a year) and I’d hear stuff about the internet but would tune it out. I had a CompuServe connection by 1991 but I was not much of a surfer.
Softdisk-offices-2-2004-03-01.jpg
Softdisk offices in Shreveport, LA, 2004.

 

What was your favorite Commodore computer? Did you have any favorite software you used on a regular basis? 
 
You’d think I would know a lot about games and the computers themselves but I never did. The only game I ever got good at was Lode Runner and I later discovered just how relatively bad I was. Some of those old LR screens are brilliantly designed.
 

Do you still have any of your old Commodore machines?
 
No, although I spotted a Super Snapshot 4 cartridge the other day.
 

Loadstar lasted well beyond the lifespan of Commodore itself. At what stage did you personally decide it was time to step down? Can you talk about the time when Loadstar (and Loadstar 128) were deemed to be “put to bed” and how that came about?
 
By 1999 we had cut back on our salaries (Judi’s and mine) so low that Judi found another job in town. Dave Moorman said he would like to take over and we knew that he could do a good job. He and his wife had stayed with us at one time and Dave and I worked a bit.
 

Can you describe how you came to become an independent book publisher under the Ramble House brand? 
 
In 1998 somebody at Softdisk challenged Jim Weiler to make a book with his computer stuff. After many trials he figured out a way to print the book from a PDF and bind the pages into a perfect-bound paperback using a glue gun and an upside-down clothes iron. He showed it to me. I was intrigued by an old mystery author, Harry Stephen Keeler, and I couldn’t find any of his books. But I was able to get a few through inter-library loan and we decided to scan the library books and make Keelers of our own. But we also offered our services to other authors.
 
Vanity Press has been around for centuries. If you buy a bunch of your own books, you can get a press to print and bind them. Usually you need to buy 200 or so copies to make it worthwhile. We claimed to be able to make as few as 1 copy for your $20. We did that for a few years or so, during which I made about 2000 books. But then big tech invented something called a DocuTech machine which could make a book in a few seconds, and we realized we could sell more books, at a cheaper price, if we had Create Space and Lulu make books for us. So my bookmaking slowed down and I made my last book about a year ago. I numbered them and the number is around 4700 books made by my ink-stained hands.

 
Thanks for your time and for telling us your experiences. I hope this walk down memory lane was as enjoyable for you as it was for us. 


- AL -




The Compleat Loadstar archive is available for purchase and download from Fender Tucker to this day. It includes disk issues 1 -199 for C64 as well as 1 - 42 for C128 for both 1541 and 1581 drives.

In addition, it includes a vast archive of the many Lodestar newsletters, cover images, music files that have been converted to MP3, and several images organized by author.

You can place your order to download the entire collection for $15 here, and please tell Fender AmigaLove sent you.


Here's some of what you'll get in the impressive and historically important Loadstar treasure trove:
  • All 199 issues of LOADSTAR in .d64 and .d81 format
  • All 42 issues of LOADSTAR 128 in .d64 format
  • .TXT files of all of the text on the issues for fast searching on your PC
  • All 21 issues of UpTime (a rival disk magazine that LOADSTAR soundly defeated and bought)
  • JPGs of all of the color covers of the issues when LOADSTAR was sold in stores
  • PDFs of all 73 issues of The LOADSTAR Letter, Jeff Jones' excellent newsletter companion to LOADSTAR
  • MP3s of selected Knees Calhoon songs
  • .d64 files of every LOADSTAR product published separately from the monthly issues: the Compleat Bible, the Compleat Programmer, all five LOADSTAR Extras, Barbara Schulak's puzzles, etc.
  • All of Dave Marquis' SID and MIDI music
  • All of Walt Harned's artwork -- Walt is the most prolific artist ever for the Commodore computer
You can find the rest of the Loadstar Collection, 200-250 - the issues after Mr. Tucker’s departure - available for download here. These were produced from the years 2000 - 2008.


--


Before signing off, Fender Tucker had one more small nugget he wanted to share with the Commodore community.

Enjoy.



DOWN TO THE LAST BYTE
by Fender Tucker
August, 2020

I imagine that programmers for our modern computers and tablets are rather blase about “memory requirements” since we now count storage in gigabytes or even terabytes. But there once was a time when bytes were harder to come by and programmers for the Commodore 64 and other 8-bit computers had to resort to all sorts of digital gymnastics to get things to fit. This is a story of how I was able to save the day by remembering a little algorithm that illustrates just how desperate for memory we sometimes were in those halcyon days.

I was working with an excellent machine language programmer whose name I have since forgotten. He had written an important, serious tool (maybe a spreadsheet or database?) and it was just about finished. I wanted it for LOADSTAR badly. But he had a snag. He had one more small feature he had to add but he had run out of memory. A 6502 processor has 65536 bytes but much of that is used for other things so he needed somehow to squeeze in about 20 bytes. Not kilobytes or megabytes. 20 measly little bytes.

His program had quite a few features that were “toggles”, meaning switches that went from on to off each time you went to them in the program. I had learned about a nifty algorithm that might be simpler than what he was doing for the toggles. Here is what he was doing. It was in machine language but in BASIC it would be something simple like

100 IF TOG = 1 THEN TOG = 0: GOTO 120
110 TOG = 1
120 Program continues

If it’s 0 then it’s now 1. If it’s 1 then it’s now 0. A simple toggle making TOG flip from 0 to 1 and back again.

So I suggested the algorithm I had learned. Check it out.

100 TOG = 1 - TOG

It does the same thing as the 3 lines above but in one quick operation that doesn’t require any comparisons or IF statements. If TOG equals 0 then TOG becomes 1. If it’s 1 then it becomes 0.

The programmer thought it over and changed all his toggles to a simple TOG = 1 - TOG and saved the 20 bytes he needed to finish the program and have it published on LOADSTAR. Victory!

This may be the most simplistic algorithm story ever told but it illustrates the power of algorithms. There are some being devised that are worth billions to big business and science. There are algorithms that know you better than you know yourself. I am so proud to have been involved with programming when every single byte mattered. We did so damn much with those 65535 bytes and thanks to Robin Harbron and other old LOADSTARites there are still new things happening in the Commodore World.

User avatar
Zippy Zapp
CA, USA

Posted Tue Jan 26, 2021 8:34 am

Awesome interview and what a nice guy. I bought my first issue of Loadstar in 1984/1985 while in High School. Once I started making money to pay for the subscription it was a no brainer as the programs and articles were awesome. I still have a few of my original issues and also a load of others that I found over the years. Sadly some of the early issues I have the disks went bad. Issues 1 through about 30 suffered from disk rot and many others too.

I think they used OPUS disks in the early days and they turned out to be a brand that I have found doesn't last through the years.

I bought the Compleat Loadstar many years ago. In fact I bought it twice because I lost the first one, which I found years later behind a book case. :lol:

Loadstar to me will always be up there with the best of the Commodore years. I still love loading them up and exploring them to this day.

Although the Amiga did have a few disk mags, they were not as focused and full featured as Loadstar. It would be awesome if there were Loadstar issues for the Amiga.





Return to “The Lounge”