As someone who grew up deeply enamored with the gaming magazines of the 90's and early 2000's, I have had to turn to subscribing to Edge Magazine from the UK to get my print fix every month along with Game Informer. American gaming magazines started dropping like flies a few years back, and now we're left with only Game Informer (which survives solely because of its unique position with GameStop), Official Xbox Magazine, and PC Gamer. For about a decade now, US gaming mags have struggled to afloat whilst sacrificing both quality and quantity in terms of paper stock and page count. Game Informer clocks in every month at 100 pages, and it's easily the most substantial of the remaining US mags.
But flip through an issue of Edge or GamesTM sometime if you haven't already, and notice the high level of quality there. In terms of presentation, the British magazines demolish ours with thick, high-quality paper stock and sturdy wrap-around covers that help the magazines keep their rigid shape even when standing side-by-side on a bookshelf for years. They make great collectors items because of the quality of their production.
The only magazines that I can remember matching the quality of UK mags back in the 90's were Next Generation and maybe GameFan, and that was the pinnacle of gaming mags' popularity in the States. I completely understand why American print mags have had such a hard time surviving and maintaining their quality presentation as time wears on in this Internet-dominated world, but how has the UK managed to sidestep this trend? Both multi-platform and console-specific mags over there come out on a monthly schedule and manage to provide 130-150 pages of quality content with great presentation every time. Not only that, but I see them frequently publishing one-off special issues in tandem with the monthly releases of the flagship magazines. It's like the 90's never ended over there!
Is print media just a lot more popular in England than it is in the States? They don't seem to have an abundance of ads accounting for their respectable pagecount every issue. The cover price is more than what we'd pay for an American magazine, even before conversion, but I'd imagine that hurts as much as it helps in terms of sales volume. Do they just have a more efficient distribution infrastructure there for magazines?
I'd love to hear from someone who has been involved in print at one point or another about this.
But flip through an issue of Edge or GamesTM sometime if you haven't already, and notice the high level of quality there. In terms of presentation, the British magazines demolish ours with thick, high-quality paper stock and sturdy wrap-around covers that help the magazines keep their rigid shape even when standing side-by-side on a bookshelf for years. They make great collectors items because of the quality of their production.
The only magazines that I can remember matching the quality of UK mags back in the 90's were Next Generation and maybe GameFan, and that was the pinnacle of gaming mags' popularity in the States. I completely understand why American print mags have had such a hard time surviving and maintaining their quality presentation as time wears on in this Internet-dominated world, but how has the UK managed to sidestep this trend? Both multi-platform and console-specific mags over there come out on a monthly schedule and manage to provide 130-150 pages of quality content with great presentation every time. Not only that, but I see them frequently publishing one-off special issues in tandem with the monthly releases of the flagship magazines. It's like the 90's never ended over there!
Is print media just a lot more popular in England than it is in the States? They don't seem to have an abundance of ads accounting for their respectable pagecount every issue. The cover price is more than what we'd pay for an American magazine, even before conversion, but I'd imagine that hurts as much as it helps in terms of sales volume. Do they just have a more efficient distribution infrastructure there for magazines?
I'd love to hear from someone who has been involved in print at one point or another about this.