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Showing content with the highest reputation on 10/03/2023 in all areas
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Looks like you figured out a solution, thank you!2 points
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I've been wanting to share my scans here but I'm not sure how to go about it. You can view the scans at https://archive.org/details/@timbisley. There are scans under various titles like Oh!PC, The Web, The Net, Yahoo, etc. Can I just say you can use any scans of mine here and someone here creates the titles in the database and grab the cbz files to edit and upload? Or maybe someone here can create the titles in the database and then I can upload them? Just let me know how to go about it.1 point
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Retromags Presents! PC Gamer Issue 241 (July 2013) Database Record Download Directly! Edited By: dablais Uploaded By: dablais Donated By: usmansm Follow us on...1 point
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Retromags Presents! PC Gamer Issue 228 (July 2012) Database Record Download Directly! Edited By: dablais Uploaded By: dablais Donated By: usmansm Follow us on...1 point
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Electronic Gaming Monthly launched a spin-off magazine called EGM² in July 1994. The month this magazine was to hit issue number 50, in August 1998, they rebranded EGM² and became Expert Gamer, but continued the same numbering system. Issue #88 was their last, but then the staff renamed the magazine once again to GameNOW, and while they still would have strategy guides and codes, they focused more on news, reviews and previews. GameFAQs was growing big time, not to mention the internet in general, and I remember never needing to really buy strategy guides as we moved into PS2, GameCube, and Xbox games because you had passionate gamers making them for free on websites. It might seem like they were now just a copy of the original EGM, with the same focus, but they actually had a slightly younger audience that carried over from Expert Gamer. It was more 10-16 year olds, whereas EGM was mostly 15+. The staff had a great personality, and they brought some fun ideas to the mag to keep it going, like a HOT or NOT section. By November 2002 (issue #13) the GameNOW staff was almost completely replaced when Ziff-Davis moved its video game magazines from Chicago to California. Only two writers from the original staff moved to California. The mag had a complete redesign shortly after, which is expected since you now had new staff and new artists taking over. The magazine lasted until January 2004. Print magazines were hit hard as the early 2000s continued, with many of the big names ceasing production by 2009-2011. GameNOW published 27 issues total. It's great to finally see issue #1. Nice colorful page layouts with easy-to-read text and easy to understand sections. For many, the Fan Club (or Letters) section was a highlight for regular readers, with new changes often and funny responses.1 point
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I do have an intact copy of VG&CE August 1992 I'd be willing to donate to the cause if you still need those two pages. I also have extra copies of all the issues missing from the archive if you need them. (33, 35, 37-39, 42-46, and 49) Happy to donate any and all to the eventual completion of the archive.1 point
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