In late 1996 Codemasters acquired the Audiogenic development and Brian Lara Cricket '99 for the PlayStation console was released in 1998. Brian Lara Cricket '96 was released the following year in 1996 also by Codemasters, and it too got to No.1 in the charts. It was successful and spent 10 weeks at No.1 in the UK video games chart during the summer of 1995. A year later Audiogenic licensed Brian Lara Cricket for the Sega Mega Drive to Codemasters. ![]() In 1994 Audiogenic identified an opportunity to capitalise on the success of Brian Lara, who had broken two long-standing world records, and rebranded World Class Cricket game as Brian Lara Cricket, initially for the DOS but also later for the Amiga. When it did eventually appear in 1993 it was a huge success, reaching No.1 in the Amiga charts. The game that was to become Graham Gooch World Class Cricket was scheduled to be released for the Amiga and Atari ST in 1991, but development was delayed to ensure quality. The game sold well and received high ratings, and so Audiogenic followed it up with Graham Gooch's All Star Cricket in 1987. In 1985, Michael McLean at Audiogenic, a subsidiary of Supersoft wrote Graham Gooch's Test Cricket for the C64 computer system. ![]() ![]() ![]() Brian Lara Pressure Play is a PSP-only version of the game, released in 2007.
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