Gaming History, One Month at a Time

GTM-2016-11

November 2016

November 2016: PS4 Pro launches on November 10.

VRPS4 ProPokemon GoSwitch reveal

Gallery 01

News

Five researched month markers or context notes.

01

November 2016

PS4 Pro launches on November 10.

A period-context note for the month, written cautiously where the evidence is broader than one exact day.

release calendar card

02

November 2016

Final Fantasy XV finally releases on November 29.

A period-context note for the month, written cautiously where the evidence is broader than one exact day.

platform notice

03

November 2016

The old idea of a fixed console generation starts to bend.

A period-context note for the month, written cautiously where the evidence is broader than one exact day.

shop-window label

04

Across 2016

VR, slim consoles and Pro hardware make the generation feel less fixed than before.

A year-level context marker included to frame the month without claiming a new event happened on a specific day.

community clipping

05

Across 2016

Pokemon Go briefly makes games visible in streets, parks and town centres.

A year-level context marker included to frame the month without claiming a new event happened on a specific day.

context plaque

Gallery 02

Releases

Eight notable releases, led by month-specific anchors where evidence supports them.

November 29, 2016PS4 / Xbox One

JRPG

Final Fantasy XV

A decade-long project finally becomes a road trip.

January 26, 2016PC / PS4

puzzle

The Witness

A puzzle island becomes a notebook, a headache and a quiet obsession.

February 9, 2016PC / PS4

narrative adventure

Firewatch

A walking-sim mystery turns solitude and radio chatter into a shared mood.

February 26, 2016PC

life sim

Stardew Valley

A solo-made farming game becomes a comfort ritual for years.

April 12, 2016PC / PS4 / Xbox One

action RPG

Dark Souls III

FromSoftware closes a cycle of ash, punishment and community archaeology.

May 10, 2016PS4

action adventure

Uncharted 4: A Thief's End

Naughty Dog gives PS4 one of its defining cinematic showcases.

May 13, 2016PC / PS4 / Xbox One

first-person shooter

Doom

id Software turns an old name into speed, metal and forward momentum.

May 24, 2016PC / PS4 / Xbox One

hero shooter

Overwatch

Blizzard makes hero composition, counters and payload chatter mainstream.

Gallery 03

Hardware

Platform, buying and industry context for the month and its wider year.

Xbox One S launches

Microsoft's slimmer console adds 4K video and HDR into a mid-generation refresh conversation.

PlayStation VR launches

Sony brings console VR to the high street, complete with demo pods, cables and cautious wonder.

PS4 Pro launches

Sony introduces a more powerful PS4 and makes 4K/HDR part of console marketing.

Nintendo reveals Switch

Nintendo's hybrid-console trailer changes NX from mystery codename to visible object.

Gallery 04

Magazine Covers

Reconstructed shelf markers for print, digital covers and late magazine culture.

2016

Edge

A reconstructed marker for VR, mid-generation hardware and a year of surprisingly varied software.

2016

PC Gamer UK

A PC marker for Overwatch, Doom, Stardew Valley, Civilization VI and No Man's Sky debate.

2016

Official PlayStation Magazine UK

A PlayStation marker for PS VR, PS4 Pro, Uncharted 4 and The Last Guardian.

2016

Official Xbox Magazine UK

An Xbox marker for One S, Forza Horizon 3, Gears 4 and Project Scorpio anticipation.

Gallery 05

Online Life

How the network felt around the edges of play.

Streams and servers

Pokemon Go briefly turns online maps into outdoor gatherings, town-centre loops and battery-pack rituals.

Services and stores

Overwatch makes hero picks, counters, Play of the Game clips and seasonal events part of everyday online speech.

Forums and feeds

No Man's Sky becomes a case study in hype, refunds, forums and the long life of post-launch repair.

Everyday connection

Discord, Twitch and Reddit increasingly define the first public draft of a game's reputation.

Gallery 06

What It Felt Like

A curator's narrative sketch of the month as lived culture.

01

The room

It felt like the generation was being stretched. Not replaced, exactly, but upgraded, accessorised and questioned.

02

The shelf

VR was both magical and faintly awkward: shop demos, headset hair, cables, motion sickness stories and one person playing while everyone else watched.

03

The conversation

Pokemon Go made gaming public in a way that felt almost surreal, especially in parks and high streets where players recognised each other without speaking.

04

The afterimage

By October, the Switch trailer gave Nintendo fans something they had badly needed: not proof yet, but a shape for hope.