Gaming History, One Month at a Time

GTM-1981-06

June 1981

June brings computer role-playing into sharper focus while Atari's Centipede starts to define a new arcade texture.

UltimaCentipedeApple IItrackball

Gallery 01

News

Five researched moments, with broad context separated from confident month-level claims.

01

June 1981

Ultima is officially released

Richard Garriott's Apple II RPG helps turn computer fantasy into a commercial series.

Fantasy disk

02

June 1981

Centipede appears in some release listings

Atari's trackball shooter adds a different rhythm to the arcade floor.

Trackball plinth

03

June 1981

Computer RPGs become collection objects

Maps, manuals and disks make the game feel like something between software and tabletop ritual.

Map fragment

04

June 1981

The UK sees RPGs from a distance

For many British players, American Apple II RPG culture is something read about rather than owned.

Import shelf

05

June 1981

Arcades still dominate public gaming memory

Even as home computers mature, the loudest games are still encountered in shared public places.

Cabinet row

Gallery 02

Releases

A shelf led by month-specific anchors, with year-level context clearly labelled.

June 1981Apple II

Computer RPG landmark

Ultima

Richard Garriott's fantasy computer RPG begins a series that will shape PC role-playing for decades.

June/August 1981Arcade

Trackball shooter

Centipede

Atari's trackball shooter becomes one of the year's defining cabinets; exact month differs by source.

March 1981Arcade

Scrolling shooter

Scramble

Konami's forced-scroll shooter helps define the language of side-scrolling arcade stages.

February 1981Arcade

Multi-stage arcade

Gorf

Midway's multi-stage shooter shows the arcade market turning hit formulas into theatrical cabinets.

July 1981Arcade

Platform-game landmark

Donkey Kong

Nintendo's construction-site platform drama introduces Jumpman and gives character action a new shape.

August 1981Arcade

Character arcade hit

Frogger

A road-and-river crossing game with a clear little hero, instantly readable peril and a tune that stuck.

September 1981Apple II

Dungeon RPG landmark

Wizardry: Proving Grounds of the Mad Overlord

A first-person dungeon crawl whose parties, stats and mapping rituals become computer-RPG grammar.

September 1981Apple II

Stealth ancestor

Castle Wolfenstein

Sneaking, disguises and procedural rooms make it an early ancestor of stealth games.

Gallery 03

Hardware

Four machines or contexts explaining how this month sat inside the wider technology culture.

Sinclair ZX81

A 1KB low-cost computer that makes programming and simple games feel newly reachable in Britain.

Z80-compatible CPU1KB RAMCassette storage

IBM Personal Computer 5150

Introduced in August, initially more office object than gaming dream, but historically enormous.

8088 CPUOpen architectureBusiness-first positioning

Atari VCS / 2600

The key home-console presence for many households before the market turns unstable.

CartridgesJoystickTelevision play

Arcade cabinets

Custom controls, bright marquees and operator placement still define the public videogame experience.

Coin-op routesDedicated controlsHigh-score tables

Gallery 04

Magazine Covers

Period magazine context, using reconstructed placeholders until verified cover scans are available.

November 1981

Computer & Video Games

UK launch issue context. Reconstructed placeholder, not a scan.

Winter 1981

Electronic Games

US dedicated videogame-magazine milestone. Reconstructed placeholder.

November-December 1981

Computer Gaming World

Early computer-game criticism and wargame culture. Reconstructed placeholder.

1981

Creative Computing

Broad microcomputer culture around games, listings and reviews. Reconstructed placeholder.

Gallery 05

Online Life

Before online gaming was ordinary, print and place carried the culture.

Online life is mostly absent from ordinary play

For most players, discovery happens through arcades, shops, magazines, friends and mail order.

Bulletin boards exist, but not as mass games culture

Computer enthusiasts may know modems and BBS culture, but it is not yet the everyday route into games.

Print is the network

A new magazine can connect owners of machines that would otherwise feel isolated.

The UK conversation is local

School friends, electronics shops and newsagents carry more practical information than any online service.

Gallery 06

What It Felt Like

A short atmospheric reading of the month as a player might have met it.

01

The arcade was still the brightest room

June 1981 still belongs to public machines: glowing marquees, cigarette-smudged cabinets, coins lined up on glass and the pressure of playing while someone watched.

02

Home computing felt like an invitation

A computer at home was not just a games machine. It was a thing you typed into, misunderstood, crashed and slowly learned.

03

The future had several shapes

A videogame could be a cabinet, a cartridge, a disk, a printed listing or a tiny black-and-white program saved to cassette.

04

In Britain, the door was opening

The ZX81 made the idea of owning a computer feel less impossible, even if the games were still austere and the keyboard unforgiving.