The CreatiVision was distributed in many
European countries, including most German-speaking countries like
West Germany,
Austria and
Switzerland and also
Italy,
South Africa, in
Israel under the
Educat 2002 name, as well as in
Australia and
New Zealand under
The Dick Smith Wizzard name. Other names for the system (all officially produced by VTech themselves) include the
FunVision Computer Video Games System,
Hanimex Rameses (both released in Australia and New Zealand) and
VZ 2000 (planned for release in
France, likely unreleased). All CreatiVision and similar clones were designed for use with
PAL standard television sets, except the Japanese CreatiVision (distributed by Cheryco) which was NTSC, a
USA release was planned.. It is now very sought by collectors. The CreatiVision console sports an
8-bit Rockwell
6502 CPU at a speed of 2 MHz, 1
KB of
RAM and 16
KB of
Video RAM, and has a graphics resolution of 256 × 192 with 15 colors and 32 sprites. The console has two integrated
joystick/membrane
keypad controllers (much like the
ColecoVision and
Atari 5200) which, when set in a special compartment on top of the console, can be used as a
computer keyboard. The CreatiVision has interfaces for a
cassette player, an extra rubber keyboard, parallel I/O interface,
floppy disk drive and
modem (likely unreleased) and one memory expansion module for use with the
Basic language cartridge. Any
Centronics-compatible printer can be connected to the I/O module if present. The CreatiVision was discontinued in late 1985/early 1986.
Laser 2001 computer A computer was produced by VTech in 1984-1986, based on CreatiVision hardware and compatible with most of its games:
Laser 2001, which is also sold in West Germany and was brought to
France. It was also available in
Finland through
Salora, with the name of
Manager. The Manager had a Finnish keyboard layout and
character set.
Colecovision module A module to allow
ColecoVision games to be played was designed for use with the CreatiVision
Mark-2 model (a later revision of the 1st model, incorporating hardware changes specifically designed to make the Coleco-module work). Before being produced, the module was modified internally and released for use on the
Laser 2001 and
Manager computers only. A special adaptor (homebrew) would be needed to make the Coleco-module work on the CreatiVision Mark-2. ==List of games==