Bruce Lee

Bruce Lee

released on Sep 01, 1984

Bruce Lee

released on Sep 01, 1984

Bruce Lee is a video game designed by Ron J. Fortier, with graphics by Kelly Day and music by John A. Fitzpatrick. It was originally developed for the Atari 8-bit family and published in 1984 by Datasoft, along with a port for the Commodore 64. The game was converted to the ZX Spectrum and Amstrad CPC and published by U.S. Gold in the same year. An MSX version was published in 1985 by Comptiq. Bruce Lee is a platform game/beat 'em up hybrid, in which the player controls Bruce Lee.


Also in series

Bruce Lee: Dragon Warrior HD
Bruce Lee: Dragon Warrior HD
Bruce Lee: Return of the Legend
Bruce Lee: Return of the Legend
Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story
Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story
Bruce Lee Lives: The Fall of Hong Kong Palace
Bruce Lee Lives: The Fall of Hong Kong Palace

Reviews View More

A good platformer with solid controls. I think the biggest issue it has is that the ninja and green sumo guy aren't challenging enemies despite their persistence, and there are parts where you can easily just reset them by switching between screens.

Energetic and colourful platformer. Imagine Chuckie Egg with flying kicks and you wouldn't be far off the mark. Run about the screen avoiding sumo warriors and sword-wielding ninjas, collecting lanterns as you go.

Status: Beaten in around 10 minutes

You can tell a game marked its time when 25 years later, people still makes fan games of this Bruce Lee 8-bit computer game.

A fun plateformer / puzzle / beat'em up.

Very simple early platforming/beat 'em up staring the Kung Fu legend himself. This is an iconic title on the C64.