Game Companies logo
GameCompanies.com
Powered by GC Insider
IndustriesJobsGames
GC Insider
All gamesuniversesplatformsenginesDevelopmentPublishingGames by year

Something missing or incorrect? Suggest an edit.

GC

  • Industries
  • Jobs
  • Games
  • Map
  • Insider

Info

  • Home
  • Presskit
  • Sitemap

Social

  • Twitter iconTwitter
  • LinkedIn iconLinkedIn
  • Instagram iconInstagram
  • Facebook iconFacebook

Contact

  • GC Advertise
  • Partner with GC
  • Submit your story
  • Suggest an edit
  • E-mail

Policies

  • Terms of service
  • Privacy policy
  • Copyright policy
  • Image policy
  • Cookie policy
Game Companies logo
GameCompanies.com

Powered by GC Insider

© 2025 GameCompanies.com
Profile picture of Impossible Mission


  • Platforms

    Modes

    Player perspectives

    Engines

      View more in GC Insider


    All website links

    All in-game images

    All release dates

    Game videos

    Suggest an edit

    Plus much more

    Makers

    Profile picture of Impossible Mission

    Impossible Mission

  • First released on 31 December, 1984 for Apple II, Commodore C64/128
  • Action
    Science fiction
    Stealth
    Platform
    Adventure
  • First released on 31 December, 1984 for Apple II, Commodore C64/128

  • Game image #1 of Impossible Mission
    Game image #2 of Impossible Mission
    Game image #3 of Impossible Mission

    About

    The situation: for three days have the strategic central computers of the great powers acted up. An unknown person manipulates their programmes; at the end of these programmes is the starting command for the intercontinental rocket. The countdown is on, only 6 hours keep the humanity from an atomic inferno. An unknown person? Only professor Elvin, the insane computer expert could crack the top secret start code, Elvin, who entrenches himself in his intangible subterraneous, guarded by 90 murderous robots, that until now had hunted down every intruder. No one who has ever set foot on the lift to Elvins cave labyrinth has returned back alive.

    The last hope: Special Agent 4125, the most cunning, toughest and most indiscriminate man, that the secret service can offer. Only ice cold reckoning and superior physical condition give this unarmed hero a tiny chance to avert the disaster in the last minute.

    The game: your task is to put a stop to evil Elvin Atombender's game. For this you have to enter in his laboratory, protected by a vault somewhere on his underground stronghold. To open the laboratory's door you need a nine letters password, each letter of which Elvin coded into a punchcard, just for cutting in four each one of them, painting them in different colors and hiding the resulting pieces everywhere in his base's furniture. So all you have to do is search into every object of every room for pieces of puzzle while surviving the robots, the pits and doctor Elvin's annoying voice, retrieve all the 36 pieces, put them together in groups of four, and head for the laboratory, where an unpleasant surprise waits you

    Platforms

    Commodore C64/128, Apple II, PC-8801, Sharp X1, ZX Spectrum, Acorn Electron, BBC Microcomputer System, Amstrad CPC, Atari 7800, Sega Master System, Nintendo Wii

    Modes

    Single-player

    Player perspectives

    Side view

    Engines

    Not available

      View more in GC Insider


    All website links

    All in-game images

    All release dates

    Game videos

    Suggest an edit

    Plus much more

    Makers

    Image of Epyx
    Epyx
    Epyx was a game developer and publisher that was founded in 1978 and went bankrupt in 1989.
    Developer
    Publisher
    Image of Comptiq
    Comptiq
    Comptiq is a Japanese computer magazine, which also released a few ports of home computer games for various systems
    Publisher
    Image of U.S. Gold
    U.S. Gold
    A British game publisher and distributor founded in Birmingham, UK in 1984.
    Publisher
    Image of Atari, SA
    Atari, SA
    Atari SA (Société Anonyme) is a French international holding company, and current owner of the Atari brand name. It was formerly known as Infogrames Entertainment. Its subsidiaries include Atari Interactive and Atari Inc. (not to be confused with the original Atari Inc. founded in 1972).
    Publisher