May 10, 1984
King's Quest is released for IBM PCjr
Sierra's animated adventure uses colour, movement and a parser to suggest a new kind of computer storytelling.
Castle Daventry card
Gaming History, One Month at a Time
GTM-1984-05
King's Quest brings animated adventure to the PCjr while Britain keeps reading across rival micros.
Timeline archive
1984 month drawer
Installed months are active; empty drawers are held for future exhibits.
Gallery 01
Five researched moments, with broad context separated from confident month-level claims.
May 10, 1984
Sierra's animated adventure uses colour, movement and a parser to suggest a new kind of computer storytelling.
Castle Daventry card
May 1984
IBM's home machine is expensive and awkward compared with UK micros, but its showcase software matters historically.
PCjr exhibit tag
May 1984
Buying a game means asking which machine it supports, and often comparing screenshots in magazines.
Format grid
May 1984
The genre is moving beyond static text into animated spaces.
Animated room
May 1984
The CPC has been announced, but families still wait for machines to reach shops.
Retail waiting label
Gallery 02
A shelf led by month-specific anchors, with year-level context clearly labelled.
Animated adventure
Sierra's animated adventure signals a new direction for graphical storytelling on home computers.
Arcade spectacle
Nintendo's twin-screen boxing cabinet makes scale and personality part of the arcade draw.
Spectrum phenomenon
Matthew Smith's sprawling mansion becomes a British bedroom-gaming landmark.
Puzzle origin
Alexey Pajitnov's falling-block idea begins in Moscow, far from UK shop shelves but central to future games history.
Puzzle-action classic
Dirt, diamonds and falling rocks create a tactile puzzle-action language for home computers.
Open-world landmark
A wireframe universe fits into a school-friendly British micro and makes space feel enormous.
Fighting-game ancestor
Konami's one-on-one fighter begins as a limited Japanese arcade release before wider 1985 success.
Beat-'em-up ancestor
Irem's side-scrolling martial-arts game points toward the beat-'em-up future.
Gallery 03
Four machines or contexts explaining how this month sat inside the wider technology culture.
The rubber-keyed machine at the centre of much British home-gaming conversation.
More expensive than the Spectrum in the UK, but admired for sound, colour and arcade-like potential.
The newcomer of 1984, sold as a complete computer package with built-in cassette deck and monitor options.
The education machine whose prestige and technical clarity made Elite feel especially startling.
Gallery 04
Period magazine context, using reconstructed placeholders until verified cover scans are available.
February 1984
A dedicated ZX Spectrum games voice arrives. Reconstructed placeholder.
January-February 1984
A new Spectrum magazine helps define the UK micro scene. Reconstructed placeholder.
February 1984 onward
Multi-format games coverage becomes part of the monthly shelf. Reconstructed placeholder.
1984
C&VG is now a regular UK games-magazine institution. Reconstructed placeholder.
Gallery 05
A few online services exist, but most play culture is still offline.
A small number of UK home-computer users can glimpse networked information, but most players still live offline.
For Commodore users with the right kit, online services suggest a future community, though it remains niche.
Arguments about machines, cheats, bugs and best games travel by post and appear weeks later.
Rumours about secret rooms, loading tricks and unbeatable games move fastest by voice.
Gallery 06
A short atmospheric reading of the month as a player might have met it.
01
May 1984 in Britain meant choosing tapes by cover art, review scores, machine format and whatever your friends were already talking about.
02
A game began before the first screen: cables checked, volume adjusted, PLAY pressed, then several minutes of hope.
03
Spectrum, Commodore, BBC and Amstrad owners did not just own hardware. They belonged to arguments.
04
Arcades still dazzled, but British gaming increasingly felt domestic: a small television, a tape recorder and a stack of magazines.