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  1. The Trap Door is a video game published for the ZX Spectrum in 1986 by Piranha Software and ported to the Amstrad CPC and Commodore 64 by Five Ways Software. [1] It was written by Don Priestley and based on the British children's television show of the same name.

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    • Trivia

    The Trap Door is a video game, and is based on the animated television series of the very same name.

    •A follow-up, “Through the Trap Door”, was distributed in 1987. It was produced for the same consoles as its predecessor.

    •Along with its sequel, this game was later repackaged for The Trap Door Collection in 1990. The compilation of the two games was, however, released exclusively for the ZX Spectrum.

  2. The Trap Door is a video game published for the ZX Spectrum in 1986 by Piranha Software and ported to the Amstrad CPC and Commodore 64 by Five Ways Software. It was written by Don Priestley and based on the British children's television show of the same name .

  3. The Trap Door is a computer game published by Piranha, for several 8-bit formats in 1986. It was written by Don Priestley and based on the British children's television show of the same name. The player takes control of Berk, who must perform tasks for "The Thing Upstairs" a never-seen entity who lives in the upper floors of the castle where ...

    • (2)
    • Amstrad CPCCommodore 64ZX Spectrum
    • AdventurePuzzle
    • The Trap Door
  4. Oct 22, 2018 · Zeus presents The Trap Door (un-emulated) for the zx spectrum, a true classic from the golden era of spectrum gaming which must not be forgotten alongside th...

    • 26 min
    • 1878
    • Zeusdaz - The Unemulated Retro Game Channel
  5. The television series spawned a video game in the mid-80s called The Trap Door and a sequel called Through The Trap Door. These games were available for the ZX Spectrum, the Amstrad CPC and the Commodore 64. [2]

  6. The Trap Door is a video game published for the ZX Spectrum in 1986 by Piranha Software and ported to the Amstrad CPC and Commodore 64 by Five Ways Software. It was written by Don Priestley and based on the British children's television show of the same name.

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