I also loved Mean Machines:
You know, I'd actually argue that early 00's PC Gamer was the best magazine I've ever read.
It is as if nostrodomus wrote that article predicted how the future would play out at the end of it. Sometimes I think it would be hard to tell the difference between some reviews and some canned automated response.With articles like this (I realise it's a scan but it is an old mag!):
I think that PC gamer gained a lot from the experience of people working Your Sinclair and Amiga Power. Gillen started out writing reviews for Amiga Power where I guess that he handed out lots of sub 5/10 scores to games that are seen as classics.
A more interesting question might be what the hell is wrong with the US that we can't get one decent magazine out the door anymore.
My fave mag back in the day.
Its nowhere near as good these days. Same goes for GamesMaster and EDGE.
Teenage me bought official Sega Saturn Magazine. A lot.
Sega Saturn Magazine told teenage me that everything was going to be fine,
Sega Saturn Magazine told teenage me N64 and PS would burn out and Saturn would remain.
Pff.
However they did give me the first disc of Panzer Dragoon Saga and Christmas Nights, so I'll let them off.
What set Edge/Next Gen apart was that they weren't written for gamers are the primary audience. They were written with people who were in the game development industry as the primary audience and consumer gamers as the secondary audience.
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What the hell is this?
Oh, ok, thank you.Future Publishing have a tradition of putting together a joke cover for someone when they leave. That's Jes Bickham, who wrote for and edited N64.
Blame the web and instant news.
I used to buy GamesMaster when I was a kid.
would you see that on a review nowadays? no, because no publication has the balls to do that anymore. N64 Magazine had fucking balls.
Wheel Of Fortune (N64): 17% - Another US quiz show port, this was found to be "worse than accidentally falling off a cliff. And surviving".
Agreed.
There was a right time, right place feeling from PCG at that time. A lot of it was just the fact that there was fantastic experience and heritage and mixed with the NGJ side of things.
What the fuck am I reading. Edge is pure garbage since the redesign. The quality
of the magaize in terms of content layout and feel is pisspoor now compared to pre redesign. Just awful.
That sounds like paradise. Take me there, will you?I think many people have mentioned the logistical reasons this happens and these are undoubtedly a large reason for this. Let me add a cultural reason for why this holds across all forms of media.
As a Brit that's lived in the United States for over a decade I still use British sources for most of my news. Us Brits tend to be cynical and use our media as a legitimate source of information to help shape our views. Americans tend to be true believers. They have a view and expect their media to confirm their opinions. An abomination like Fox News would never work in Britain because people tend to look for facts, not opinions. It is true you have biases like those shown by the Guardian or the Telegraph but they don't have the sway something like Fox News does here.
I think many people have mentioned the logistical reasons this happens and these are undoubtedly a large reason for this. Let me add a cultural reason for why this holds across all forms of media.
As a Brit that's lived in the United States for over a decade I still use British sources for most of my news. Us Brits tend to be cynical and use our media as a legitimate source of information to help shape our views. Americans tend to be true believers. They have a view and expect their media to confirm their opinions. An abomination like Fox News would never work in Britain because people tend to look for facts, not opinions. It is true you have biases like those shown by the Guardian or the Telegraph but they don't have the sway something like Fox News does here.
That sounds like paradise. Take me there, will you?
It's a world where - almost - anything goes; broadcasters are free to say 'all Muslims should be bombed' on the air, though swearing isn't allowed.
Radio hosts don't care who they offend, and they cheerfully admit to political bias: they see it as their job to get Obama voted out.
Talk-radio may be preaching to the converted, but in re-affirming the listeners' prejudices, Krishnan finds only highly partisan versions of the 'truth' survive.
TBH I don't know what financial chicanery goes on with Edge - I know it's the best place to advertise gaming jobs, so at a guess I'd say that's its golden egg and at a guess I'd say it recoups more of its costs from the cover price than most print - but from the start it's always presented itself as a serious/grown-up magazine about video games (when it launched it was about £1.50 more than the next most expensive mag), and the design & quality of the printing materials (and as someone who has worked in publishing that cover stock is gorgeous for look and feel - really tactile paper) always put if outside of its contemporaries.
It's also managed to have a pretty stable circulation - it's an 'industry' read, and from what I remember when I bothered with things like circulation figures, it was always consistent.
e2a - worth pointing out that they have economised on print stock over the years, especially on the inner pages where both paper weight and silk treatment went down a few years ago (early issues had some crazy weight like 90gsm on silkscreen)...
This is the big one. Less shipping costs, easier to get to all sales locations and subs.
That said, we did have Next Generation here in the US, which was the sister magazine to Edge. Edge content would appear in Next Gen and Next Gen content would appear in Edge.
What set Edge/Next Gen apart was that they weren't written for gamers are the primary audience. They were written with people who were in the game development industry as the primary audience and consumer gamers as the secondary audience.
While most game mags (and game blogs like Kotaku, Polygon, etc.) today focus on the *games* Edge/Next Gen always focused on *how the games were made*.
When I wrote for Next Gen, the reviews were typically very short and were sandwiched in the back of the magazine. Yes, judgments were given and scores applied, but they were not prominent in the way the feature stories were. It was one of the few outlets which didn't rely on reviews to carry the publication. The fact that it had a print lead time also meant that any news had to be meaty. You wouldn't find stuff that was repeated from another outlet (like you do so often on the web today).
This was covered in an episode of Unreported World, USA: Talk Radio Nation (UK, so use hotspot shield to watch). Fascinating and scary for a Brit to see how the shock jocks work, and how impartiality is seen as a no-no where you're just hearing the extremes. More about confirmation bias, news you want to hear.
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on my god that carmageddon 64 review always makes me laugh. N64 Magazine's verdict:
would you see that on a review nowadays? no, because no publication has the balls to do that anymore. N64 Magazine had fucking balls. Some more examples:
Here in the UK, we were home to the greatest gaming magazine there ever was and ever will be:
glorious. brutally truthful - even to big third party and Nintendo games, first with the new news, and always always fucking hilarious
Still my all-time favourite review conclusion. Inspired.
They also did a Perfect Dark feature in issue 30 which was stupidly massive and featured a gorgeous piece of original artwork on the cover by Wil Overton, who went on to work for Rare's art department as a result. I remember quite literally waiting by the door every morning for a solid week until that issue arrived.
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EDIT: Bahahah, just seen the fantastic Digitiser/Teletext screens posted above. God, that takes me back.
That's really cool. I hadn't seen that. Thank you!
Let's not forget the awesome teletext Digitiser, read that religiously
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Also, DON'T TOUCH MR T's BINS!
When I was a kid/teenager I LOVED a lot of the gaming mags around. I honestly think even the UK games mags were better back then than they are now (not a huge fan of Games TM or Edge, Retro Gamer is awesome though)
I used to buy absolute loads. Hell I didn't even own an Amiga and bought Amiga Power as it was so damn good (plus I played the Amiga at my friends house so not a total waste)
With articles like this (I realise it's a scan but it is an old mag!):
I also loved Mean Machines:
Let's not forget the awesome teletext Digitiser, read that religiously
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Also, DON'T TOUCH MR T's BINS!
Last year, I read through every single issue of Super Play. Great magazine. As mentioned with the N64 magazine, their reviews were fairly honest, with poor games receiving very low ratings. I actually used the magazine to discover a few SNES games I had overlooked for my collection.
Let's not forget the awesome teletext Digitiser, read that religiously
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Also, DON'T TOUCH MR T's BINS!
Here in the UK, we were home to the greatest gaming magazine there ever was and ever will be:
glorious. brutally truthful - even to big third party and Nintendo games, first with the new news, and always always fucking hilarious
That one was good, too bad it lasted just a few issues.Here in Italy pretty much every mag died, we had some good productions and some good translations but they all got killed one way or another.
I found a RetroGamer UK with a 20th anniversary of Sonic special at a con, I bought it and it was good (We had a Retrogamer translation but only 4 issues came out, we had an Edge-like mag that turned into Edge and that lasted ~1 year)
That was when they had the retro and guides section on the yellow pages section (along with things like for sale and high scores, remember those?), right?that's not Paul Davies-era CVG
If it was not for the answer given I would have guessed subscriber only cover.![]()
What the hell is this?
GameCentral is on the Metro website complete with the same inbox format and hot topics (twice a day except at weekends where the hot topic is) and reader features.Yeah Digitiser was great, shame it had to finish really.