It certainly would interest me if I had any way to play vinyl . But... More importantly... You Amiga weirdos didn't get the sampled version of that song in the intro...? Huh. How quaint. This is the intro we Atari ST owners got...
Err... That *is* the sampled version, isn't it? Did you listen to the Miggy version past the first few seconds?
Then I'll have to go back and listen again, they sounded totally different to me! Edit: Nope, the Atari ST and Amiga versions have totally different versions of that song in the intro. The Amiga version sounds more like it was composed on Amiga sound hardware with some samples used here and there. The Atari ST version sounds like the Bomb the Bass song playing at a lower resolution and bitrate. Throughout the rest of the game the Atari version of the soundtrack definitely sounds inferior, but the Atari intro is miles better IMO.
The Amiga version is a tracker file, and I think the ST version is a straight recording - but both include the sampled speech missing from some other ports.
tss dada tss da tss dada tsss "Rubble wob rubrub rubble?" "Erm...let's see now...I'll take the Super Nashwan please. Here - have all my money."
Nah, mate - one hand to hold the crappy base down (on any stick!) and operate the autofire switch, one hand to move and shoot both buttons. ZipStiks needed a team of two (or bolts to the desk) and from memory, both buttons did the same. Pfft. Amateur! On a different note - I don't know how you find these things/what newsletters you're signed up to, Gareth, but this from that other site you linked was a good read - https://readonlymemory.vg/the-making-of-speedball-2/
Pretty sure the vast majority of Amiga joysticks only had one fire button input, and the vast, vast majority of Amiga games were set up to accept only one fire button input. And ZipStiks had decent suckers - I never had an issue with mine detaching from my desk
Did someone say ZipStik? (The box with its backside facing the camera in the back's another ZipStik, too.)