November 1991
The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past launches in Japan.
The launch is treated as a historical marker, with regional timing noted where the evidence is uneven.
shop-window card
Gaming History, One Month at a Time
GTM-1991-11
November gives Zelda a new 16-bit shape in Japan.
Timeline archive
1991 month drawer
Installed months are active; empty drawers are held for future exhibits.
Gallery 01
Five researched moments or context markers, with cautious wording where the month is a quiet drawer.
November 1991
The launch is treated as a historical marker, with regional timing noted where the evidence is uneven.
shop-window card
November 1991
A period marker for the month, included with cautious language where exact dates vary by region or source.
magazine clipping
November 1991
From a UK perspective, this mattered through retail timing, import pages, playground talk and the monthly magazine cycle.
demo station label
November 1991
A period marker for the month, included with cautious language where exact dates vary by region or source.
import shelf note
November 1991
A period marker for the month, included with cautious language where exact dates vary by region or source.
context plaque
Gallery 02
Eight notable games from the year, led by month-specific anchors when the evidence supports them.
adventure landmark
Nintendo returns Zelda to a top-down world with greater scale and polish.
UK-made puzzle landmark
DMA Design and Psygnosis turn tiny walkers into a national puzzle obsession.
arcade fighting landmark
Capcom reshapes the fighting game around characters, queues and mastery.
Mega Drive identity
Sega's mascot arrives in PAL regions and North America within days.
16-bit RPG
Square uses Nintendo's 16-bit machine for a more dramatic RPG language.
cinematic platformer
Eric Chahi's cinematic platformer makes silence, animation and danger feel authored.
home beat-'em-up
Sega gives home players a stylish brawler for the Mega Drive era.
late 8-bit action
Capcom extends its late-8-bit action craft in Japan.
Gallery 03
Machines, formats and buying context around the exhibit month.
Sega's colour handheld becomes part of the British handheld comparison, even as battery life remains part of the bargain.
Nintendo's 16-bit machine changes the US conversation, while UK players are still mainly watching previews and import pages.
Sonic's arrival makes the Mega Drive feel less like imported arcade muscle and more like a full identity.
NEC's CD/cartridge hybrid points toward a future where storage formats are becoming part of the story.
Gallery 04
Reconstructed shelf markers for the magazine culture surrounding the year.
1991
A UK console magazine shelf object for the Sonic and SNES year.
1991
The broad UK monthly still connects arcades, consoles and computers.
1991
Sega coverage becomes part of the high-street language around Mega Drive and Game Gear.
1991 context
A Nintendo-focused shelf marker; exact early issue dating should be checked before scan replacement.
Gallery 05
How players found information before search, streams and social feeds.
Gaming discussion mostly travels through dial-up bulletin boards, school friends and magazine letters pages.
Before the web becomes ordinary, disks, BBS uploads and copied archives give PC games a different route into homes.
Codes and maps still feel like information smuggled through magazines or friends rather than instantly searchable knowledge.
Knowing what Japan or America already has can make a UK reader feel months ahead and months behind at the same time.
Gallery 06
A short atmospheric reading of the month from the player side of history.
01
Sonic made the 16-bit argument feel fast, blue and designed for television adverts.
02
Street Fighter II was the cabinet everyone talked about, but its home future still had to be imagined.
03
Lemmings made one Amiga screen feel like a tiny society in crisis.
04
Mega Drive was visible, SNES was desirable, and many players still lived with 8-bit machines at home.