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Commodore 64 Fireworks Construction Kit

Published July 4, 2019

About This Video

Celebrate the 4th of July retro computing style with Fireworks Construction Kit for the Commodore 64, also known as the Complete Computer Fireworks Celebration Kit. Originally released by Activision in 1985, this colorful and creative Commodore 64 software title allowed users to design and launch their own animated digital fireworks displays complete with music, sound effects, and joystick-controlled interactions.

Developed by John van Ryzin with music composed by Stephen Gaboury, Fireworks Construction Kit became one of the more unique and memorable creativity programs released for the Commodore 64 during the mid-1980s. Using a joystick connected to Port 1 on the C64, users could customize fireworks patterns, timing, colors, launch positions, and visual effects to create personalized fireworks shows on classic Commodore hardware.

This video showcases the program running on a Commodore 64 while exploring the graphics, music, controls, and overall nostalgic charm of this unusual Activision release. Fireworks Construction Kit perfectly captures the spirit of 1980s home computing where software often blended creativity, entertainment, experimentation, and technical curiosity into one experience.

Whether you remember using Fireworks Construction Kit during past Independence Day celebrations or are discovering it for the first time, the program remains a fun example of how creative and imaginative Commodore 64 software could be during the golden age of 8-bit home computing.

Fireworks Construction Kit remains a unique and nostalgic piece of Commodore computing history, blending Activision C64 software, joystick-controlled creativity tools, retro Fourth of July fun, and classic 8-bit multimedia experimentation.

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