Seems many of us hail from around the same time period with regard to computing.
I, too, started off with a Commodore 64, courtesy of the old man buying one for me AND my younger brother in early '82. Younger bro, however, had just discovered GURLS (and had precious little time for anything else), so I pretty much had it to myself.
Unlike many, I didn't use it for games. I played around with the in-built Commodore BASIC, and became quite proficient with it.....writing several simple versions of popular board games & stuff. Yes, I'd initially looked at the ZX80/81 - had a play with a couple belonging to a mate - but gawd; that horrible membrane keyboard was a real killer. I much preferred the proper keyboard the C64 was blessed with.
This was probably a carry-over from the Commodore PET the school's science lab had taken delivery of in '78, the year before I left. OK, strictly speaking it was a 'chiclet' keyboard.....but at least you could feel what you were doing with it!
I tried to talk the old man into buying us the 1541 the following Xmas, but he put his foot down at that; wasn't having none of it. "Too expensive", he said. So I carried on with the trusty old Datasette.....at least there was no messing around with a volume control to get the thing functional. You just plugged it in, and it worked immediately. Which in the early days of the "home computing revolution", was quite an eye-opener!
Happy days...
Mike.