Arcade • February 20 –
Konami releases
Contra • July 1 –
Irem releases scrolling shooter
R-Type. • July –
Technōs Japan releases
Double Dragon to arcades, distributed internationally by
Taito. • August 30 –
Capcom releases
Street Fighter, the first game of the series. •
Taito releases
Rastan and
Operation Wolf. •
Namco releases
Wonder Momo, which is their last 8-bit game,
Yokai Dochuki, which is their first 16-bit game,
Dragon Spirit,
Blazer,
Quester,
Pac-Mania, ''
Galaga '88 and Final Lap''. •
Atari Games releases
RoadBlasters,
Xybots, and
APB.
Home • January 14 –
Nintendo releases
Zelda II: The Adventure of Link for the
Famicom Disk System in Japan only. The game would go unreleased in America for nearly two years afterwards. • February 12 –
Infocom releases
Bureaucracy from author
Douglas Adams. • May 1 –
Konami releases
Castlevania in North America. • June 21 –
Nihon Falcom releases
Ys I: Ancient Ys Vanished for the
PC-8801 in Japan only. The game's director is
Masaya Hashimoto, and it is the first game in the long running
Ys series. • June –
Codemasters release
Dizzy – The Ultimate Cartoon Adventure • July 1 –
Nintendo releases
Kid Icarus in North America. • July 5 – the
Leisure Suit Larry in the Land of the Lounge Lizards adventure is released by
Sierra Entertainment. • July 13 –
Konami releases
Metal Gear for the
MSX2 home computer platform in Japan and Europe. • August 15 –
Nintendo releases
Metroid in North America. • August 22 –
Nintendo releases
The Legend of Zelda in America and Europe, a year after being available in Japan. • August 28 –
Konami releases ''
Castlevania II: Simon's Quest'' in Japan, the second
Castlevania title released for the NES/Famicom. • October –
Nintendo releases ''
Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!!'' for NES/Famicom. • October –
LucasArts releases
Maniac Mansion, the first game to use the
SCUMM engine, innovating the
point-and-click interface for the
adventure game genre. • November 14 –
Sierra On-Line releases ''
Space Quest II: Vohaul's Revenge, the second game in the Space Quest'' series. • December 17 –
Capcom releases the first
Mega Man game in the long-standing series for the NES/Famicom. • December 18 –
Square's
Hironobu Sakaguchi releases
Final Fantasy for the
Famicom in Japan. Originally intended to be the company's last release, the game's success resulted in a prolific series. It was released in the US 3 years later. • December 20 –
Sega releases
Phantasy Star on the
Master System, featuring a female protagonist. •
FTL Games releases
Dungeon Master for the Atari ST. •
Sierra On-Line releases
Police Quest: In Pursuit of the Death Angel, the first game in the
Police Quest series. •
MIDI Maze for the
Atari ST is a first person shooter allowing up to 16 computers to be networked via the built-in MIDI ports for deathmatch-style fights. •
Incentive Software releases
Driller, a first person game using 3D filled polygons. •
Ocean Software releases
Head Over Heels, an isometric
arcade adventure, for several 8-bit home computers. •
MicroProse releases ''
Sid Meier's Pirates!'', the first game from Meier with his name in the title. •
System 3 releases
The Last Ninja. •
Accolade releases
Test Drive.
Hardware • March 28 –
Sharp releases the
X68000 in Japan. • April – IBM launches the
PS/2 line of computers which introduces
VGA graphics and 3.5 inch
floppy disk drives to PCs. • September –
Master System released in Europe. • October 30 –
NEC releases the
PC-Engine console in
Japan, starting the
fourth generation. •
Acorn releases the
Acorn Archimedes 32-bit home computer, which brought the game
Zarch (later known on other platforms as
Virus) to prominence. •
Commodore releases the lower-cost
Amiga 500 which became a significant gaming machine, particularly in Europe, and becomes the best-selling model. •
Atari Corporation releases the XE Game System, or
Atari XEGS, a repackaged 65XE computer which is the last in the
Atari 8-bit computer series. •
Master System is released in
Japan. •
AdLib sets a
de facto standard for PC audio with its
Yamaha YM3812-based sound card. •
Namco develops the
Namco System 1 arcade system board, followed later in the year by the
Namco System 2. • The
IBM PCjr is discontinued after three years. ==See also==