Play Dizzy

Play Dizzy games online, on original hardware, or through modern platforms. The adventure is waiting.

Browser / Free

Internet Archive Emulation

The Internet Archive hosts browser-playable versions of many Dizzy titles via JavaScript emulation. No download or installation needed — play ZX Spectrum, C64, and other versions directly in your browser.

Search Dizzy on Archive.org →

Standalone Emulator / Free

ZX Spectrum: Fuse / Spectaculator

For the most authentic ZX Spectrum experience, use Fuse (Linux/Mac/Windows, free and open source) or Spectaculator (Windows/iOS, commercial). ZX Spectrum tape images for Dizzy titles are widely available.

World of Spectrum documents releases: worldofspectrum.org →

Standalone Emulator / Free

C64: VICE

VICE is the premier free Commodore 64 emulator, available for all platforms. The C64 versions of Dizzy feature the acclaimed SID music by David Whittaker and Matt Gray — hear it as intended with proper SID emulation.

C64 game database: lemon64.com →

Standalone Emulator / Free

Amiga: FS-UAE / WinUAE

FS-UAE (cross-platform) and WinUAE (Windows) provide full Amiga emulation. The Amiga versions of Dizzy feature richer graphics and sound, particularly for the later titles.

Hall of Light Amiga database: hol.abime.net →

Nintendo Switch / Commercial

Fast Food Dizzy (Switch, 2022)

The only officially released modern Dizzy title. Fast Food Dizzy is available on the Nintendo Switch eShop — the easiest way to play Dizzy legally on modern hardware with no emulation required.

Available on the Nintendo eShop. Search “Fast Food Dizzy”.

Fan Games / Free

DizzyAGE Fan Games

The Yolkfolk community has produced dozens of original Dizzy adventures using the DizzyAGE engine. These are free, lovingly crafted, and often capture the spirit of the original games beautifully.

Browse DizzyAGE games at Yolkfolk.com →

NES ROM / Free

Wonderland & Mystery World Dizzy

The cancelled NES Dizzy games were released as free ROM downloads in 2015 following the Oliver Twins’ Kickstarter campaign. Play them with any NES emulator such as Mesen.

See History and Modern pages for context.

All emulation should use legitimately obtained game files. The Internet Archive and World of Spectrum host publicly preserved copies under fair-use preservation principles for out-of-print titles.