February 1995
Saturn and PlayStation previews dominate future-facing pages.
A period marker for the month, included with cautious language where exact dates vary by region or source.
shop-window card
Gaming History, One Month at a Time
GTM-1995-02
February is the pause before the 32-bit year accelerates.
Timeline archive
1995 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.
February 1995
A period marker for the month, included with cautious language where exact dates vary by region or source.
shop-window card
February 1995
A period marker for the month, included with cautious language where exact dates vary by region or source.
magazine clipping
February 1995
A period marker for the month, included with cautious language where exact dates vary by region or source.
demo station label
February 1995
From a UK perspective, this mattered through retail timing, import pages, playground talk and the monthly magazine cycle.
import shelf note
February 1995
This drawer is deliberately quiet: the exhibit marks absence rather than inventing a false headline.
context plaque
Gallery 02
Eight notable games from the year, led by month-specific anchors when the evidence supports them.
RPG landmark
Square's dream-team RPG becomes one of the late 16-bit era's defining objects.
six-degree shooter
Parallax's six-degrees shooter makes PC movement feel newly disorienting.
graphic adventure
LucasArts turns biker pulp into a compact, cinematic adventure.
SNES showcase
Nintendo gives the SNES a hand-drawn late-era flourish.
RTS landmark
Westwood gives RTS a louder, more cinematic command structure.
PlayStation launch aura
Psygnosis ties PlayStation racing to UK club culture and design.
late SNES showcase
Rare keeps the SNES visually alive in the PlayStation year.
RTS sequel
Blizzard's RTS sequel sharpens the PC strategy war.
Gallery 03
Machines, formats and buying context around the exhibit month.
Sega's 32-bit machine arrives first, but with a complicated price, timing and software story.
Sony enters UK high streets with a clearer brand, CD cases and launch games that feel club-adjacent.
Nintendo's red tabletop experiment becomes a warning sign that not every future is comfortable.
Command & Conquer, Descent and multimedia titles make PC upgrades feel less optional.
Gallery 04
Reconstructed shelf markers for the magazine culture surrounding the year.
1995
The 32-bit transition gets the glossy, serious treatment.
1995 launch-era context
A PlayStation shelf marker; issue chronology should be checked against scans before final publication.
1995 launch-era context
A Sega 32-bit shelf marker; replace with verified issue art later.
1995
The PC shelf is heavy with RTS, CD-ROM, Pentium talk and big boxes.
Gallery 05
How players found information before search, streams and social feeds.
URLs begin to feel like little doorways, though most players still rely on print.
Command & Conquer helps make multiplayer strategy part of PC social life.
PlayStation demo discs and PC cover discs are still the main way many UK players sample the future.
The games web is present but scattered, closer to a noticeboard than a polished archive.
Gallery 06
A short atmospheric reading of the month from the player side of history.
01
PlayStation made games feel closer to music, club culture and electronics retail than toy shelves.
02
Saturn had arcade credibility, but the story around it was harder for ordinary buyers to parse.
03
Command & Conquer turned base-building into a language of barks, clicks and green video briefings.
04
A new console, a CD-ROM drive or one more SNES cartridge could all plausibly be the right answer.