TV Gamer Magazine was published in the U.K. from the Summer of 1983 through March 1985 and covered the various video game consoles of that time. The last two issues were incorporated into Big K before disappearing completely. The March 1984 issue includes:
Cover Feature
- Tanks a lot - Taking time out from outer space, we beam down to earth for tank-based battle games, with a survey of tank games.
Reviews
- The New games - Big Brother - that's Darrin Williamson to you, folks - takes a look over the new goodies, and finds the future far from black.
In Depth Reviews
- Night Stalker - New it isn't, but this intriguing Mattel maze is still adding new addicts, so perhaps they'll be relieved that assistance is at hand, in the form of Paul Whiffin who shows you how to zap the robots, spiders and other meanies.
- Pitfall - Harry, the hero of Pitfall, has a total of 256 jungle screens to negotiate before he can collect enough money bags, gold and silver bars, and diamond rings to make it worthwhile braving the crocs, scorpions, fires and death pits that lie in wait. Dave Bishop shows you how harry can make it.
- Mr. Do - Life is just a bowl of cherries for Mr. Do - or it would be, if the Bad Guys would let him pick them from the cherry orchard, not to mention the Alpha Monster and the Blue Choppers. High scorers will cherish (sorry!) the Dave Trutzenbach guide to the eight screens and beyond.
Systems
- Atari Excels - Inside the new XL generation of computers, we find there's a lot of power, plus a keyboard that really works. We take the lid off while not baffling you with the scientific jargon. Don't you wish all hardware reviews were written this way?
Competition
- Win the new Atari 600 XL
Special Delivery
- Getting games into your machine - A no-nonsense guide to carts, cassettes, floppies, microdrives and other thingies, from Karl Dallas, who got it all out of his bubble memory - before it burst.
The Arcade Scene
- The laser game is here - After its frenzied fictional role as a space weaponry, the laser finds a real-life existence as the technology behind some of the finest video graphics you've ever seen. Andy Harris spits on his hands and climbs into the cockpit of two of the most realistic ones.
Games Governments Play
- Sky wars - These games are deadly serious, as today's Biggleses throw themselves about a computer-generated sky, without endangering a million quids' worth of jet fighter. Plus some dazzling full-color pictures of what it feels like to be in the cockpit.
The TV Gamer Awards
- The nominations - To guide you in filling in the nominations card inserted in this issue, here are 16 pages of reviews of the TV games of the year, listed alphabetically from Action Force to Z-Tack, complete with details of prices and the systems they play on.
Regulars
- The green eye shade department
- News
- Top 20
- TV gamer club
- Advertisers, subscriptions and fine print
...and more!
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