August 1978
The arcade floor starts reorganising around shooters
Space Invaders makes the fixed shooter feel like the form everyone has to answer.
Shooter shelf
Gaming History, One Month at a Time
GTM-1978-08
August belongs to the aftershock: Space Invaders is spreading, but many other 1978 releases remain known by year rather than by month.
Timeline archive
1978 month drawer
Installed months are active; empty drawers are held for future exhibits.
Gallery 01
Five researched moments from an early videogame year, with broad context separated from confident month-level claims.
August 1978
Space Invaders makes the fixed shooter feel like the form everyone has to answer.
Shooter shelf
August 1978
The Atari VCS will benefit from Space Invaders later, but in 1978 the real thing is still public.
Console gap
August 1978
Atari's 1978 arcade catalogue is varied, but exact month-level placement is not forced here.
Atari catalogue card
August 1978
For Britain, Space Invaders is a public experience: a machine, a queue, a sound, a pocket of change.
UK arcade token
August 1978
This month keeps year-level Atari context separate from named August releases.
Archive caveat
Gallery 02
A deliberately sparse shelf: only releases supported by the sources reviewed are displayed.
Intentional gap
The sources reviewed do not support a full list of notable videogame releases specifically for August 1978. This drawer stays sparse rather than turning year-level facts into fake launch dates.
Gallery 03
Four objects explaining the month: public cabinets, home consoles, microcomputers and control technology.
By August 1978, Taito's cabinet represents the new centre of arcade gravity, even where local rollout is still uneven.
The cartridge console exists, but it has not yet received the arcade conversion that will transform its sales.
Atari Football helps make the trackball a memorable public control surface.
Home computer games still travel through listings, ads and specialist computing magazines more than through ordinary game retail.
Gallery 04
Paper remains the map: computing, electronics and arcade context before games media fully settles.
August 1978
BYTE represents the paper network around early games: computing, electronics, arcades and the pre- or early-specialist games press world.
August 1978
CREATIVE COMPUTING represents the paper network around early games: computing, electronics, arcades and the pre- or early-specialist games press world.
August 1978
PERSONAL COMPUTER WORLD represents the paper network around early games: computing, electronics, arcades and the pre- or early-specialist games press world.
August 1978
PRACTICAL ELECTRONICS represents the paper network around early games: computing, electronics, arcades and the pre- or early-specialist games press world.
Gallery 05
Networked play exists at the edges, but ordinary players live in a world of paper, cabinets and local knowledge.
For most players in August 1978, games are discovered through arcades, shops, magazines, clubs and word of mouth rather than online services.
PLATO, university systems and early networked computing matter historically, but they are not normal UK consumer gaming.
Magazines, adverts, catalogues, manuals and club newsletters explain what machines and games exist.
High scores, queues and overheard advice make the cabinet a public information system.
Gallery 06
A young medium, a patchy record, and a future split between public machines and home hardware.
01
The arcade suddenly feels invaded: one cabinet can pull a room into a shared rhythm of shots, shields and descending pressure.
02
Home games still feel smaller than the public machine. The VCS is promising, but the arcade owns the spectacle.
03
In Britain, this is a public memory first: cafes, arcades, seaside amusements, coins and the sound of aliens advancing.
04
Exact dates are often regional, trade-led or retrospective. The exhibit keeps month-level certainty separate from year-level context.