[2] Wetmore met Adventure International founder Scott Adams in 1981 and was hired as a liaison for external game authors.
[2] He ported the underwater, horizontally scrolling shooter Sea Dragon to Atari 8-bit computers (1982).
[3] The TRS-80 original, by Wayne Westmoreland and Terry Gilman, draws the undersea terrain as monochrome outlines, while the Atari version adds colorful, filled graphics.
All three of Wetmore's games were developed under the name Star Systems Software and published by Adventure International.
"It will involve a three-dimensional room filled with bouncing balls which the player must drop through holes in the floor.
[7] It contains a word processor (HomeText), database (HomeFind), and terminal communications program (HomeTerm).
[8] With Sparky Starks, Wetmore co-authored HomeCard, an Atari 8-bit application advertised as an "electronic filing box" and "intelligent Rolodex."