Numerous versions of
Space Ace were created for home computers and game systems, most of which attempted to mimic the arcade version's lushly animated hand-drawn footage, with varying degrees of success. Along with the floppy disk-based versions for Amiga, Apple IIGS, Atari ST, MS-DOS and Macintosh, ReadySoft issued a CD-ROM version featuring downsampled video for MS-DOS and Macintosh which preserved almost all of the original laserdisc content. A sequel, ''Space Ace II: Borf's Revenge'', was created and shipped on floppy disk for the aforementioned computer platforms mixing new animation with scenes from the original game that were left out of the previous version due to large file sizes. version of the game which used 4 floppy disks In 1991,
Leland Corporation released a slightly updated version of
Space Ace in the form of a conversion kit for the then recently released ''
Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp''. The updated version added more complicated moves (including diagonal moves), and dropped the easier skill levels, meaning only the "Ace" (difficult) level could be played. In 1993,
Space Ace was released for the
Philips CD-i (Compact Disc Interactive). It was later released on the
Sega CD in 1994.
Space Ace was also released for the
Super NES by
Absolute Entertainment in 1994
under the same name. Because a SNES cartridge has limited storage however, it ended up being a
top-down perspective action game with levels based on the scenes from the original. In order to see the credits, the player must get an "Ace" rank on every level, meaning that they must have near-perfect accuracy and collect all the disks found throughout the game. However, some scenes from the original have been kept in video format albeit in low resolution. ''The Dragon's Lair Deluxe Pack
released by Digital Leisure in 1997 featured Space Ace
along with both arcade Dragon's Lair
games. They also released a version of Space Ace'' on DVD that could be played on most DVD players, although it lacked the skill level select of the arcade version, and also played somewhat differently (if the player made a mistake on the arcade version they simply picked up again roughly where they left off, whereas the DVD version made the player replay the entire scene from the beginning).
DAPHNE, an emulator for laserdisc based games, can emulate both the original and 1991 versions. It 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 DVD. As with ''Dragon's Lair
, a comic book miniseries incorporating elements from both the game and its Saturday Supercade'' version (such as Ace randomly changing into Dexter and back, instead of "energizing" back into Ace) was released in 2003 by Crossgen Publishing. In the December 2003 issues of
PSW (
PlayStation World) and
XBW (
Xbox World), a free disk was given away with the magazine featuring
Space Ace on one side (accompanied by trailers for similar games), and trailers for upcoming games on the other. In May 2009, the game was made available on
iOS. In October 2010,
Space Ace appeared on
Wii as part of the ''Dragon's Lair Trilogy
, which also features Dragon's Lair and Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp''. It was later released as
DSiWare in North America on December 6 and in the PAL region on December 31. The PlayStation 3 port by Digital Leisure was released through the
PlayStation Network on February 22, 2011. An
Android port of the game was released on December 28, 2012, via
Google Play. In August 2013, the game was made available through
Steam. In July 2015,
Rebecca Heineman released the source code from a
reverse engineered
Apple IIGS version (dating back from 1990) on
GitHub. There is a compilation sold on the PlayStation Store also called ''Dragon's Lair Trilogy
, which contains the original Dragon's Lair
, Space Ace
, and Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp'' as a set.
Space Ace appeared on
Nintendo Switch as part of the ''Dragon's Lair Trilogy
(a possible port of the Wii release), which also features Dragon's Lair
and Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp'' in January 2019. An NES version of
Space Ace was developed, but never released. == Reception ==