RUN December 1991
“Maximizing your Commodore potential” (which mostly involved buying additional hardware) was the focus of this issue’s cover article.
seen from Russia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from France
seen from Venezuela

seen from Malaysia
seen from Canada
seen from South Korea
seen from Netherlands

seen from Germany
seen from Sri Lanka
seen from Yemen
seen from Singapore
seen from Sweden

seen from France

seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany
seen from Germany

seen from Ireland
RUN December 1991
“Maximizing your Commodore potential” (which mostly involved buying additional hardware) was the focus of this issue’s cover article.
RUN October 1987
A repackaged Commodore 128 (now available in North America) with detachable keyboard and built-in floppy disk drive, an external disk using 3.5-inch floppies (reminiscent of a drive for the Apple II that had been available for a while), and a monitor to match featured in this issue.
RUN June/July 1990
With this issue, RUN shifted to a ten-issues-a-year model; the bimonthly summer issue wasn’t two times as thick as its thin predecessor, although it did have more pages. A 3.5-inch floppy drive that had been around for several years returned, talked up once again as something new to get.
RUN July 1986
The repackaged Commodore 64C, along with a repackaged standard floppy disk drive, a 3.5-inch floppy drive, and an improved monitor to show off the bundled GEOS software, all featured on this issue’s cover. More new hardware from Commodore was featured inside, with the editorial explaining Thomas Rattigan had replaced Marshall Smith as the company’s president and chief executive officer to turn things around (by, among other things, bumping up the price of the 64C.)