Sunday, 12 April 2026

Gamers 2 - Ghosts in the Machine - The Golden Age of Micros by Mel Croucher - Book Review

Mr Croucher is back with a second entry in a planned five volume set of Gamers tomes, this time casting an eye on the glory days of the microcomputer - the 1970's and 80's. Twenty machines are featured within this near two hundred page tome and as with the first book, the presentational style is a first person view from the machine itself written in a style fitting to that computer's background.

The Altair 8800 is the first Ghost to speak, followed by the Commodore PET, Apple ][, and so on, until we reach the last micro of the 1980's the ill-fated, but oh so funky, SAM Coupe. As you can see from the contents page, there are a lot of familiar names for those who either lived through the period or know their history, and for this tired and cynical late forties enthusiast, the only entry that foxed me was for the Matra Alice. 

"Alice? Alice? Who the fu...?" as some of you of a certain vintage may ask (or sing), and to be fair, for a computer that only had 125 units produced and never left the borders of France, well, it was a fascinating tale to read. 

With each entry, you get a short fact sheet that provides details of the computer's creators, sales numbers, price, specs etc. I would have liked to have seen the sources for the sales figures, given how muddled various stated totals can be once you go down that particular rabbit hole, but there you go. The core texts prove to be entertaining potted histories/commentaries, and a nice line in humour abounds. There are also some photographs and software screenshots to spice things up a bit, albeit in mono, which is totally fine. 


At the back of the book, we have a Hall of Fame and separate Roll of Honour for those who paid a little bit more to support the publication effort, then details of the entire Gamers series. These comprise of the cover designs and contents pages, as well as the expected dates of availability for both backers and the general public. The schedule seems to be pretty consistent (assuming the following Kickstarter's are successful), with Gamers 5 due out to supporters by July 2027, and to a wider audience by December 2027. 


This is another interesting publication from Mel Croucher, and one that filled in some gaps in my knowledge as well as being an overall enjoyable read. For those wanting a compact reference on the subject, it is a worthy effort. Whether the author can land the following three Gamers tomes without the presentational style becoming tired remains to be seen, but so far, I am looking forward to the third volume's Kickstarter.

Gamers 2 is in the hands of backers now, and general availability is due in July this year. The publisher's page for this volume can be found here. Gamers 1 is available from all good bookshops - you can check out where exactly from the publisher's page here

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