Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back

Screenshots1 / 4

A platformer level displays a brown wooden fence spanning the width of the screen, with a fox character positioned on the left side. Behind the fence, a dark night scene shows a brick building with lit windows on the right, a black tree silhouette on the left, and blue sky above. A white dashed line and dotted UI elements appear at the top, indicating score or progress tracking. The pixel art uses a 16-bit color palette with detailed sprite animation for the character and environment.

Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back

4.3 (3.4K)
DOS Action 519 plays

Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back is a side-scrolling platformer released in 1992 by Titus Interactive. Players control the fox protagonist through a series of themed levels, progressing from the starting point toward Marrakech and eventually returning home. The gameplay focuses on navigating platforms, jumping over obstacles, and avoiding enemies to reach the exit of each level. The game features straightforward controls with movement and jump mechanics typical of the era. Each level introduces new hazards and environmental challenges that increase in difficulty. The level progression moves players through distinct locations, with the journey narrative providing context for the level design. Platforming sequences require precision timing and navigation skills.

Released
Platform
DOS
Genre
Action
Players
1P
Rating
4.3 / 5 (3.4K)
Last updated

Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back Controls — DOS Keyboard Keys

Default keyboard bindings for Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back 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.

Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back Longplay & Gameplay Videos

Watch a full playthrough of Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back 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

"Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back" DOS longplay 1992

External references

Frequently Asked Questions

When was Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back released?

Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back was released in 1992 for the DOS.

How many players does Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back support?

Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back is a single-player Action game for the DOS.

What type of game is Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back?

Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back is a Action game for the DOS, playable instantly in your browser — no downloads, no installs.

How can I play Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back for free?

Open this page and click "Play Now" — Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back runs free in your browser via WebAssembly emulation. No account, no payment, no installer.

Do I need to download anything to play Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back in the browser?

No. Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back streams from a public archive into a browser-side DOS emulator. Nothing is installed on your computer.

Can I save my progress in Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back?

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 Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back 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 Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back this way?

RetroGameSpace is a transient caching reverse-proxy and does not host first-party copies of Titus the Fox - To Marrakech and Back. 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.

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