'Vague' was great, used to pick it up in High St Kensington Market - the 'Televisionaries' issues was class
I also really liked 'Underground', a free job that used to infrequently appear around London, edited by Matt Fuller and Graham Harwood (of 'Mongrel'), and featuring more ideas in its 8 pages than most other zines crammed in, with stuff on computer viruses, supermarket rituals, Stewart Home's "Royalwatch" column, the East London Psychogeographical Association, Homocult and the foul-mouthed Mandy B
Also 'Bugs & Drugs' from Bristol was pretty amusing. There used to be a fanzine from Liverpool called 'Dregs', which basically started off as this bloke hitch-hiking around the country to catch Ned's Atomic Dustbin gigs, which took off after he gathered this core base of contributors who'd send in articles about anything they fancied (I think one of Babes in Toyland did a piece once), from suicide to sexual anecdotes. It also stood out as being one of the few, if not only, punk / indie zines that also gave space to stuff like London Posse and NWA, as well as the not very underground U2.
I also occasionally read "HAGL" (Have A Good Laugh), an Oi! zine from Burnopfield, which was done by this bloke called Trev Howarth - the band interviews were mostly dull, but he was a member of AFA and the stuff about anti-fascist street action and local politics / council expose's were normally good reads. This was slightly tempered by Howarth's gleeful obsession with winding up any liberally minded readers by calling naff things 'gay' and making sick jokes about child abuse. Best moment I remember was when he interviewed Andy Martin (Apostles / UNIT), who wound him up right back with comments like "If you can't restrict yourself to 2 pints a week, you don't deserve to live" and claiming that all punks were cowards and jealous of hard working, dedicated law students - all of whom deserved bags of money.