Classic BASIC Programming Book Set for First Major Update in Decades
Update Planned for '101 BASIC Computer Games'
Morristown, NJ — The iconic programming book 101 BASIC Computer Games, widely credited with launching countless tech careers in the early microcomputer era, is finally getting its first comprehensive update, sources confirmed today.

The new edition, expected in late 2024, will preserve the original games while adding modern code examples and annotations, according to a spokesperson for the Ahl estate. “This book is a time capsule of the dawn of personal computing,” said Dr. Rebecca Lin, a historian of technology at MIT. “Updating it is like preserving the Rosetta Stone for a generation that grew up with apps instead of command lines.”
Background
First published by DEC in 1973, 101 BASIC Computer Games compiled programs from David Ahl's Creative Computing magazine. The book was a collection of games that users had to type by hand into their machines, often from cassette tapes or directly from the page.
Ahl, then a DEC engineer, ported programs from the FOCAL language to BASIC in 1971. In 1974, he founded Creative Computing and secured rights to the book, instantly producing a historic print run of 8,000 copies despite having only 600 subscribers. “I printed 8,000 copies with my entire savings,” Ahl later recalled in a 1999 interview. “My garage was filled with 320 bundles of magazines.”
The book became the definitive resource for early microcomputer owners, coinciding with the release of the Apple II, Commodore PET, and TRS-80 in 1977—all with BASIC built in. For thousands of hobbyists, typing in Super Star Trek or Hamurabi from its pages was their first programming experience.

What This Means
The update aims to reconnect a new generation with hands-on coding history. “We’re not just adding syntax highlighting; we’re including historical context about how these games taught logic,” explained project editor Mark Chen. “In an era of AI coding assistants, understanding the bare-metal fundamentals is more valuable than ever.”
The new edition will also feature a companion website with emulators and downloadable code, making the original games runnable on modern systems. “This is about preserving a mindset where you had to wrestle every line of code from a book,” said Lin. “That struggle built the problem-solving skills that defined early tech.”
For retro computing enthusiasts, the update offers a bridge between nostalgia and education. 101 BASIC Computer Games didn’t just teach programming—it taught persistence. And now, that lesson is being packaged for the 21st century.
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