''Dragon's Lair
led to the creation of numerous video game ports for home systems. Since some original sequences did not fit in the ports for those systems, they were re-released only in a virtual sequel called Escape from Singe's Castle'': • A
nonlinear arcade interpretation of ''Dragon's Lair
and Escape from Singe's Castle'' with elements of platform and puzzle was made by Software Projects for 8-bit machines in 1986. • A
side-scrolling cinematic platformer adaptation of the game was also made for the
Nintendo Entertainment System, titled ''
Dragon's Lair''. • The Game Boy version (entitled ''
Dragon's Lair: The Legend) in particular has almost nothing to do with the source game aside from Dirk as the protagonist, Mordroc as the villain, and saving Princess Daphne as the objective. In fact, the game is a port of a five-year-old ZX Spectrum game, Roller Coaster'', the result being a platform game where Dirk has to negotiate a series of thinly-disguised fairground rides. The later
Game Boy Color version
of the same name, however, is a relatively faithful rendition of the original game. • Another platformer adaptation of the game was also made for the
Super NES, also titled ''Dragon's Lair''. • ''The Dragon's Lair Deluxe Pack'' was released for home computers containing all the FMVs for all three games. Though it contains all the video including some scenes cut from the North American version of the game, the gameplay was reported as lackluster. • ReadySoft ported and released ''Dragon's Lair'' for the
Macintosh computers on CD-ROM in 1994. A
Sega CD version was also released. •
DAPHNE, an emulator for LaserDisc-based games, can emulate the original 1983 version. DAPHNE requires the ROM files plus the original LaserDisc to run. Alternatively, an
MPEG-2 video stream and
Ogg Vorbis audio stream can be substituted for the LaserDisc. These streams can be generated from the original LaserDisc or from Digital Leisure's 2002 DVD. Various home computer adaptations of ''Dragon's Lair
were released during the 1980s and 1990s, but because of (at the time) high memory consumption due to the detailed animation of the games, not all scenes from the original game were included. Reviewers of the home computer versions differed widely in their appraisal of the game, with one Amiga magazine awarding 92% due to the unprecedented audio-visual quality, while another magazine gave the same version a score of only 32%, on account of the "wooden" gameplay. This led to Escape from Singe's Castle'', a pseudo-sequel where Daphne is kidnapped at the moment of Dirk's victory by a shapeshifter, forcing him to venture even further into the castle to save her again. The game was made up of unused scenes from the LaserDisc version, though some portions (such as the lizard king and mud men) were shortened. The 8-bit versions were created by
Software Projects, while
ReadySoft handled the 16-bit versions. These used video compression and new storage techniques but came on multiple
-inch and
-inch floppy disks. In late 2002, to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the original arcade release,
Digital Leisure produced a special edition DVD box set containing ''Dragon's Lair
, Space Ace
and Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp
. All the scenes from the original arcade releases were included and optionally the player could select new scenes that were animated in 1983, but not included in any previous Dragon's Lair'' release. The games were also updated to include higher quality video, authentic scene order and a new difficulty selection to make it more challenging. Digital Leisure worked with a small independent game developer, Derek Sweet, to release a CD-ROM 4-disc box set for Windows-based PCs. In late 2006, Digital Leisure released ''Dragon's Lair HD
, which features an all-new high-definition transfer from the original negatives (as opposed to just sourcing the LaserDisc). The original mono soundtrack has also been remastered into Dolby Digital 5.1 sound (on PCs that can support it). On April 9, 2007, a Blu-ray version of Dragon's Lair
was released. This uses the same HD transfer as the aforementioned PC release but went through a 6-month process to clean and remaster the image. Dragon's Lair
Blu-ray is the first title to fully utilize BD-J technology. In 2013, Dragon's Lair
was released on Steam via Steam Greenlight. This iteration of Dragon's Lair'' features 720p remastered video, remastered game footage, and bonus content. The home conversions received mixed reviews. The Commodore 64/128 version of the game was reviewed in 1988 in
Dragon #133 by Hartley, Patricia, and Kirk Lesser in "The Role of Computers" column. The reviewers gave the game 3 out of 5 stars.
GameFan reviewed the
Sega CD version, scoring it 297 out of 400.
GamePro reviewed the Sega CD version in 1994. They commented that the controls require such precise timing that the game can be very frustrating, and criticized the lack of replay value and grainy video quality, but were positive in their assessment of the game, asserting that "
Time Gal,
Road Avenger, and
Sewer Shark are all coy imitators of the best LaserDisc arcade game there ever was... ''Dragon's Lair
!" In 1994, Electronic Gaming Monthly'' gave the Sega CD version a 6.2 out of 10, criticizing that "pinpoint accuracy" was required to complete the game, making it too frustrating.
Electronic Gaming Monthly gave the
3DO version a 7 out of 10, praising the superior graphics and short load times. They gave the CD-i version a 7.5 out of 10, with all four of their reviewers agreeing it to be the best home version of the game to date.
Next Generation reviewed the CD-i version of the game, rating it two stars out of five. Though they concurred that it was an arcade-perfect conversion, they concluded that "People who like the stand-up version or enjoyed any of Don Bluth's other titles [...] will be in heaven, otherwise it's probably best avoided." • In July 2010, the
iOS version was released by
Electronic Arts on Apple's
App Store. The game's graphics have been cleaned up for the
iPhone screen. • In early 2019, HarmlessLion released ''Dragon's Lair'' under a license from Digital Leisure for the
TI-99/4A home computer. It was released as a 128MB cartridge playable on the stock console. • In March 2022, Brutal Deluxe, in celebrating their 30th anniversary, ported ''Dragon's Lair'' to the
Apple IIGS computer, using resources from ReadySoft's Amiga, Atari ST and PC DOS versions from decades earlier. == Reception ==