The Lynx was an 8-bit British home computer that was first released in early 1983 as a 48 KB model.
When compared to its competitors, such as the ZX Spectrum and the Oric 1, it was also fairly highly priced.
In June 1986, Anston sold everything - hardware, design rights and thousands of cassettes - to the National Lynx User Group.
The group planned to produce a Super-Lynx but was too busy supplying spares and technical information to owners of existing models, and the project never came into being.
[12] Considering applications, demos, operating systems modern homebrew software and others, the library for this machine is around 120 titles.