Well, I was feeling nostalgic about the CPC days, so I started a search for roms and a good emulator. I am going to post some shots of those which were my favorite games. All hail emulation 
For those of you who don't know, the Amstrad CPC (also known as Schneider in Germany) is a home computer series created through the 80's. The CPC464 (the one I have) was released in 1984, and it had 64K RAM and a built-in cassette drive. The CPC664 also had 64K of RAM, but it featured a disk drive instead of the cassette one. The CPC6128 featured... 128K of RAM!!!
These last two were released in 1985. Among other things, the CPC series had a 4Mhz CPU, a sound generator running at 1Mhz, digital joysticks support... The Amstrad CPC needed a monitor in order to run, because the power supply was integrated at the base of the monitor, thanks to which you only needed one plug for the whole thing. The monitor could be a green one, displaying the colours as different shades of green, or a colour monitor (I had the green one
).
Later, in 1990, The Amstrad CPC Plus was released, but I don't know much about it
Well, enough talking, here are the screenshots. The first game is The Last Ninja 2.
For those of you who don't know, the Amstrad CPC (also known as Schneider in Germany) is a home computer series created through the 80's. The CPC464 (the one I have) was released in 1984, and it had 64K RAM and a built-in cassette drive. The CPC664 also had 64K of RAM, but it featured a disk drive instead of the cassette one. The CPC6128 featured... 128K of RAM!!!
Later, in 1990, The Amstrad CPC Plus was released, but I don't know much about it
Well, enough talking, here are the screenshots. The first game is The Last Ninja 2.