Gaming History, One Month at a Time

GTM-1988-02

February 1988

February stays mostly contextual: computer RPGs, 16-bit dreams and arcade sequels are all in motion.

quiet drawerRPGsAmiga/STarcades

Gallery 01

News

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

01

February 1988

Computer RPGs grow heavier

Wasteland and Pool of Radiance make the year's computer shelves feel serious and manual-driven.

manual stack

02

February 1988

Amiga and ST screenshots carry prestige

For UK readers, 16-bit machines now increasingly represent the top shelf.

16-bit screenshots

03

February 1988

Arcade sequels keep raising intensity

Konami, Sega, Namco and Taito are all pushing cabinets into sharper identities.

arcade row

04

February 1988

The Mega Drive is still future tense

Sega's new console is months away from its Japanese launch.

future console card

05

February 1988

No confident February-only release anchor

The month remains a context drawer.

quiet card

Gallery 02

Releases

Eight notable games from the year, led by month-specific anchors where the evidence supports them.

January 1988Arcade

run-and-gun sequel

Super Contra

Konami's sequel pushes run-and-gun action harder, though exact early arcade timing varies.

March 24, 1988Arcade

shooter sequel

Gradius II

Konami revisits the power-up-bar shooter with more spectacle and confidence.

1988Commodore 64 / Apple II

post-apocalyptic RPG

Wasteland

Interplay's post-apocalyptic RPG becomes a long shadow over later computer RPGs.

1988DOS / C64

Gold Box RPG

Pool of Radiance

SSI's first Gold Box AD&D game brings Forgotten Realms tactics to home computers.

June 1988Arcade

Sega arcade brawler

Altered Beast

Sega's mythic transformation brawler becomes closely tied to the Mega Drive's launch image.

1988Amiga / Atari ST

16-bit simulation

Carrier Command

Realtime Games mixes strategy, vehicles and islands into a 16-bit technical showcase.

1988Commodore 64

UK micro hit

Last Ninja 2

System 3 sends the ninja into a bigger, more confident sequel.

October 23, 1988Famicom

platform landmark

Super Mario Bros. 3

Nintendo's platform sequel makes the Famicom feel impossibly polished.

Gallery 03

Hardware

Four machines or technology contexts that explain the month's place in gaming history.

Sega Mega Drive

Launched in Japan on October 29, Sega's 16-bit console marks a new phase even before Britain feels it.

68000 CPUcartridge consoleJapan-first launch

Famicom / NES

Super Mario Bros. 3 and late-year action games show Nintendo's 8-bit machine at a peak.

Famicom/NES cartridgesPlayChoice contextregional release gaps

Amiga and Atari ST

16-bit home computers make screenshots, music and simulation ambition central to the UK magazine experience.

3.5-inch disksmouse interfacespremium pricing

UK 8-bit micros

Spectrum, C64 and CPC remain everyday machines even as 16-bit hardware and Japanese consoles dominate headlines.

cassette loadingbudget tapesformat-specific reviews

Gallery 04

Magazine Covers

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

1988

ACE

A polished multi-format guide to the 8-bit, 16-bit and console worlds. Reconstructed placeholder, not a verified scan.

1988

The Games Machine

Newsfield's multi-format monthly follows the widening games market. Reconstructed placeholder, not a verified scan.

1988

Crash

The Spectrum scene remains a practical centre of British games culture. Reconstructed placeholder, not a verified scan.

1988

Zzap!64

Commodore 64 coverage keeps the UK 8-bit shelf loud and opinionated. Reconstructed placeholder, not a verified scan.

Gallery 05

Online Life

Before online gaming was ordinary, paper, shops and local conversations carried the culture.

Online life is still a side-room

Compunet, Micronet, BBSs and modem culture exist, but most players remain offline.

Magazine previews are the browser window

A reader can travel from Mega Drive to Amiga to Spectrum without leaving the newsagent.

Regional release gaps create mythology

Games can be famous before they are locally available.

Letters pages create slow communities

Machine loyalty, review arguments and high-score claims move through print over weeks.

Gallery 06

What It Felt Like

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

01

The next generation was visible but distant

February 1988 could show you the Mega Drive and Super Mario Bros. 3 in print while your own evening still belonged to a cassette or floppy disk.

02

Screenshots carried desire

Amiga, ST, arcade and Japanese console images made the future feel glossy and expensive.

03

The UK bedroom remained stubbornly practical

For all the hardware drama elsewhere, British players still loaded games, swapped tapes and read reviews by format.

04

Arcades became mood pieces

Splatterhouse, Chase H.Q. and Altered Beast made cabinets feel darker, faster and stranger.