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Defend the Alamo
A landmark action game for the DOS, Defend the Alamo combines tight controls with engaging gameplay. Its enduring appeal lies in the perfect balance of challenge and reward.
- Released
- 1994
- Platform
- DOS
- Genre
- Action
- Rating
- 4.3 / 5 (2.3K)
- Last updated
Defend the Alamo Controls — DOS Keyboard Keys
Default keyboard bindings for Defend the Alamo on our in-browser DOS emulator. Plug in a USB or Bluetooth gamepad to auto-detect mappings, or rebind any key from the emulator settings menu.
DOS games use the keyboard directly as the controller — there is no console-button mapping. Open the in-game documentation or check the game-specific options screen for the key layout used by this title.
Rebind any key from the EmulatorJS in-game settings menu (gear icon → Controls). A connected gamepad auto-maps to the same buttons.
Defend the Alamo Longplay & Gameplay Videos
Watch a full playthrough of Defend the Alamo on DOS before you dive in — recommended for getting a feel for the game's pacing, story beats, and difficulty curve.
Watch longplay on YouTube
"Defend the Alamo" DOS longplay 1994
External references
Frequently Asked Questions
When was Defend the Alamo released?
Defend the Alamo was released in 1994 for the DOS.
What type of game is Defend the Alamo?
Defend the Alamo is a Action game for the DOS, playable instantly in your browser — no downloads, no installs.
How can I play Defend the Alamo for free?
Open this page and click "Play Now" — Defend the Alamo runs free in your browser via WebAssembly emulation. No account, no payment, no installer.
Do I need to download anything to play Defend the Alamo in the browser?
No. Defend the Alamo streams from a public archive into a browser-side DOS emulator. Nothing is installed on your computer.
Can I save my progress in Defend the Alamo?
Yes. Save states are stored in your browser (IndexedDB) per game, and you can also use any in-game save the original DOS cartridge supported.
Does Defend the Alamo work on mobile devices?
Yes — the DOS emulator runs on iOS Safari and Android Chrome. Touch controls overlay the game; landscape mode is recommended.
Is it legal to play Defend the Alamo this way?
RetroGameSpace is a transient caching reverse-proxy and does not host first-party copies of Defend the Alamo. Game files are fetched on demand from publicly-accessible archives. You are responsible for compliance with your local laws and the bring-your-own-ROM principle.