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Llamatron

Heart of Neon Review – The Definitive Jeff Minter Documentary

14/06/2026 By ausretrogamer

It’s been a long, fiercely independent road – but Heart of Neon stands as an incredible testament to one of the most singular and enduring voices in home computing history.

Can you think of anyone in the video games industry who has been making games continuously for more than 40 years?

We’re not talking about giant corporations or sprawling development studios. We’re talking about a single individual. One person. One vision.

Give up?

It’s Jeff Minter.

For over four decades, the legendary founder of Llamasoft has remained one of the most fiercely independent, creative and uncompromising figures in video game history. From his bedroom coding days on early home computers, through classics such as Gridrunner, Attack of the Mutant Camels, Llamatron and the mind-blowing Tempest 2000, right up to modern psychedelic masterpieces like Polybius and Tempest 4000, Minter has followed his own path regardless of trends, publishers or market expectations.

Documenting a career as remarkable, unconventional and enduring as Jeff’s is no easy task.

Thankfully, filmmaker Paul Docherty was more than up to the challenge.

Heart of Neon is a feature-length documentary that chronicles Jeff Minter’s extraordinary journey through the evolution of the video games industry, from the birth of home computing through to the modern era. More importantly, it captures something many documentaries fail to achieve – it captures the spirit of its subject.

From the opening moments, it’s clear that this isn’t simply a timeline of game releases or a collection of talking heads recounting old stories. Heart of Neon is a deeply personal exploration of an artist who has spent his entire life chasing a vision. Through interviews, archive material, game footage and some truly remarkable never-before-seen content, Docherty paints a vivid portrait of the man affectionately known throughout gaming circles as “The Yak”.


source: Heart of Neon (YouTube)

What struck me most was just how much care and attention has gone into every frame. The documentary has been painstakingly assembled over many years, overcoming funding challenges, production hurdles and even a global pandemic that threatened to derail the project. Yet, much like Jeff himself, Paul and his team simply kept pushing forward. The perseverance on display behind the camera mirrors the determination of the film’s subject.

And that effort absolutely shows.

The production values are superb. The editing flows beautifully between decades of gaming history, while the visual presentation perfectly complements Minter’s colourful, psychedelic creations. There are moments where game footage, interviews and archival material blend together so seamlessly that you become completely immersed in Jeff’s world. It’s the kind of documentary that grabs viewers by the eyeballs and refuses to let go until the credits roll.

For long-time Minter fans, Heart of Neon is packed with fascinating insights and stories that have rarely, if ever, been shared publicly. For newcomers, it’s an ideal introduction to one of gaming’s true pioneers – a developer who stubbornly remained independent while much of the industry consolidated around him. The film does an excellent job of explaining why Jeff matters, not just to retro gaming enthusiasts, but to the broader history of video games itself.

One of the documentary’s greatest strengths is its honesty. It celebrates the highs, including the enormous success and influence of Tempest 2000, while also examining the setbacks, disappointments and challenges that come with dedicating your entire life to creative independence. The result is a story that feels authentic and deeply human.

By the time the credits roll, you’ll likely walk away with an even greater appreciation for Jeff Minter – not just as a game developer, but as an artist who has remained true to himself for more than forty years.

In an industry often obsessed with bigger budgets, safer bets and shareholder expectations, Jeff Minter stands as a reminder that video games can still be personal, eccentric and joyfully weird.

Heart of Neon celebrates that legacy perfectly.

Whether you’ve been following Llamasoft since the Commodore 64 days or only recently discovered Jeff’s work through modern releases, this documentary is essential viewing.

Much like the neon-lit visuals that inspired its title, Heart of Neon shines brightly as both a love letter to Jeff Minter and a celebration of independent game development itself.

Score: 95%

Heart of Neon is not just one of the best video game documentaries I’ve seen – it is the definitive story of Jeff Minter, told with passion, authenticity and heart.

image source: Heart of Neon

Acknowledgement: Special thanks to Paul Docherty for providing access to Heart of Neon for the purposes of this review. No payment or compensation was received, and the opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the reviewer.

Filed Under: Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Atari Jaguar, Attack of the Mutant Camels, classic gaming, Commodore 64, gaming history, Heart of Neon, Indie Developer, Jeff Minter, Llamasoft, Llamatron, Paul Docherty, Polybius, Retro Gaming, Tempest 2000, Video Game Documentary, yakyak, zx spectrum

Llamasoft: The Jeff Minter Story is Coming in 2024

07/12/2023 By ausretrogamer

Gridrunner. Revenge of the Mutant Camels. Tempest 2000. Llamatron. In the British gaming universe of the ’80s and ’90s, nobody made games like Jeff Minter.

Revealed in the Day of the Devs showcase, Digital Eclipse’s Llamasoft: The Jeff Minter Story is an interactive documentary coming to PC and consoles in 2024. Play the history of one of the weirdest, wildest game developers to ever exist — a man who loves shooters and sheep, lasers and llamas!

PS: We are looking forward to playing the (never released) Konix Multi-System – Attack of the Mutant Camels ’89!!

Journey back in time to an era of cassette tapes, photocopied zines, and README.TXT. An era in which a kid with a Commodore VIC-20 and dreams of radioactive sheep could become one of Britain’s best-known game makers. A virtual museum of design documents, playable games, and all-new videos tell the fascinating story of a true independent game designer.

FEATURES

  • Four “interactive timelines” tell the story of Jeff Minter and Llamasoft through archival photos, design documents, playable games, and more historical artifacts.
  • Over an hour of all-new video featurettes from Paul Docherty, director of the upcoming documentary film Heart of Neon.
  • Game library features 42 classic games from 8 different platforms, including the unreleased Konix Multi-System hardware.
  • The all-new Gridrunner Remastered updates the classic game’s graphics and sound, while still running on the original Commodore 64 code for 100% accurate gameplay
  • Two of Jeff Minter’s innovative “light synthesizers,” Psychedelia and Colourspace, are fully playable with all-new console controls.
  • Save, load, and rewind your gameplay at any point, plus other quality-of-life features.
  • Supports English, French, Spanish, German, Italian, and Japanese.

INCLUDED GAMES

  • Sinclair ZX81
    • 3D3D
    • Centipede
  • Commodore VIC-20
    • Abductor
    • Andes Attack
    • Deflex V
    • Gridrunner
    • Hellgate
    • Laser Zone
    • Matrix: Gridrunner 2
    • Metagalactic Llamas Battle at the Edge of Time
    • Ratman
  • Commodore 64
    • Ancipital
    • Attack of the Mutant Camels
    • Batalyx
    • Gridrunner
    • Hellgate
    • Hover Bovver
    • Iridis Alpha
    • Laser Zone
    • Mama Llama
    • Matrix: Gridrunner 2
    • Metagalactic Llamas Battle at the Edge of Time
    • Psychedelia
    • Revenge of the Mutant Camels
    • Revenge of the Mutant Camels II
    • Rox 64
    • Sheep In Space
    • Voidrunner
  • Sinclair Spectrum
    • City Bomb
    • Headbangers Heaven
    • Rox III
    • Superdeflex
  • Atari 8-bit
    • Attack of the Mutant Camels
    • Colourspace
    • Gridrunner
    • Hover Bovver
    • Turboflex
  • Konix Multi-System
    • Attack of the Mutant Camels ’89
  • Atari ST
    • Llamatron: 2112
    • Revenge of the Mutant Camels
    • Super Gridrunner
  • Atari Jaguar
    • Tempest 2000
  • Reimagined
    • Gridrunner Remastered

image source: Digital Eclipse




Filed Under: Announcements, Modern Gaming, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: 80s, 90s, Atari, Atari Jaguar, C64, Day of the Devs, Digital Eclipse, Gridrunner, Jeff Minter, Konix Multi-System, Llamasoft, Llamasoft: The Jeff Minter Story, Llamatron, Tempest 2000, TxK, VIC-20

The Retro Gaming Vault – May 2021

03/06/2021 By ausretrogamer

Our first retro gaming vault feature proved successful, so we thought we’d keep things going!

For this month’s images, we delved further into our vault and dug up some cool and peculiar photos of items we have in our collection and from gaming parties we have attended and ComLynxed with our friends!

We hope you keep enjoying these blasts from the past!

Will always love the PC-Engine HuCards – they are so cute and packed with awesome gaming!

Keeping our N64 in tip top shape!

Got to get our monthly C64 fix (especially some World Class Leaderboard)!

Llamatron 2112 on the Jag or…..

……Revenge of the Mutant Camels?

Love getting some action on the little Neo Geo Pocket Color

ComLynx parties are always the fun!

The Neo-Vec controller is pretty darn awesome to use on the Vectrex

The rare and obscure Noun. Tempest 3000 is just sublime!

Our favourite Commodore 64 in our collection. The Suncom Thumbstick is a brilliant little controller, especially on Wizard of Wor!

Original image copyright: ausretrogamer




Filed Under: History, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Atari Jaguar, atari lynx, ausretrogamer vault, C64, ComLynx, Commodore 64, Llamatron, N64, Neo Geo Pocket Color, NGPC, Nintendo 64, Nuon, Old School, oldschool, pc-engine, play together, Retro Gamer, retro gaming vault, Retrocomputing, Retrogamer, retrogaming vault, Tempest 3000, Vectrex

Heart of Neon: A Life Inside Video Games

24/09/2019 By ausretrogamer

You’ve either heard of Jeff Minter or you haven’t. If you have, then that means you know he creates high-octane, psychedelic retro-style shoot’em up video games, usually with a camel, llama or some other ungulate. Perhaps you don’t know Jeff, but you have played Tempest 2000 on the Atari Jaguar, arguably Jeff’s best known game. It’s mind blowing to think that Tempest 2000 was released 25 years ago, when Jeff was already a decade plus into his game development career, which is still going strong today, with the impending release of Minotaur Arcade Vol 1 on the PlayStation 4.

A story of one game designer making video games for four decades deserves to be told. That’s the mission of Paul Docherty, a filmmaker who himself used to work as a graphics designer in the early days of video games. Paul is now making a feature documentary called HEART OF NEON, which centres around Jeff and Llamasoft. He talks about the documentary’s goals in more detail here.

Paul is currently raising funds to help put Jeff’s legend out into the world, and he’s gratefully accepting crowdfunding pledges right now!

You can follow everything about the Heart of Neon documentary on Twitter, Facebook, Twitch and Instagram.

image source: Paul Docherty – Heart of Neon

 

Filed Under: Announcements, Retro Gaming Culture Tagged With: Amiga, C64, Commodore 64, Documentary, Film, Heart of Neon a life inside video games, Heat of Neon, HON, Jeff Minter, Kickstarter, Llama, Llamasoft, Llamatron, Minotaur Arcade, Ox, Paul Docherty, PS4, retro computing, retrocomputers, sheep, Tempest 2000, TxK, video, Yak

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