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Showing content with the highest reputation on 11/29/2023 in all areas

  1. 298 downloads

    VideoGames & Computer Entertainment Issue 37 (February 1992)
    5 points
  2. This is made by the editors of EGM, specifically one named Trickman Terry (if I remember right). Its just a very short 8-page list of tricks and cheats for SNES and Genesis games back in 1993. With a little from Sega CD, the Duo, NES, GameBoy, and Lynx. You have Batman Returns (snes), Cybernator (snes) Hook (snes), Bubsy (snes), Chuck Rock (gen), Predator 2 (gen), and way more. Nowadays you would just look these up on GameFAQs.com. Half this thing is ads – no joke. It's 4 pages of advertisements, and 4 pages of codes.
    1 point
  3. This is made by the editors of EGM, so it has an honest look at a bunch of games from E3 1997, and it's not just an ad. There is a great map of the exhibition floor showing were the top 10 companies are, like Sony, Sega, Nintendo, Konami, Acclaim, EA, and a few more. They show you a pie graph with a breakdown of what percentage of games were shown for each system. A lot of this is written by Dan Hsu, with other parts from Ed Semrad, Shawn Smith, and Crispin Boyer. There’s even a small interview with Bruce Willis. This is a nicely written 15-page look at lots of new games at E3 that probably just didn’t fit in the proper EGM issue. Many games only have one sentence about them (like 10-12 words) but the point was looking at every little screenshot square to see if it might be a game that you were interested in. This is a great guide to the show.
    1 point
  4. This is a 16-page supplement on the Neo Geo system, showing a comparison against the SNES, Genesis, and Sega CD, and giving you a preview of Fatal Fury and Crossed Swords. This is part of their “Bigger, Badder, Better” campaign, so it really feels more like an advertisement, and it is. The writing and the lingo reads like a “cool dude” telling kids about the most powerful home console – which happens to be $650. You can also buy a double-reinforced padded bag for your expensive console and up to 3 games. Or buy a t-shirt, or a $15 Neo Geo poster and frame it for your living room (because you NEED to be making big money and own your own house to buy our console). You get a small look at other games, but it's not much.
    1 point
  5. This is a very basic 32-page look at around 100 games and accessories across the NES, SNES, Genesis, and TurboGrafx-16. This contains very short 25-word descriptions for most games, but a few use slightly bigger text boxes that have around 35-60 words. Most games have at least two screenshots, and some accessories are covered like the SNES Advantage, and Game Boy Game Genie. Each system has a full column of text that covers the latest news in the last year. This has some info from the 1992 Summer Consumer Electronics Show, and it mentions the Aladden Deck Enhancer, but mostly this is a very plain looking supplement that gives you very basic info on a number of games, usually only two sentences long (which is about 25 words). It’s a nice little thing to look through and possibly find a game you might be interested in.
    1 point
  6. Going to do the guide for Paper Mario for the N64. I need a palate cleanser.
    1 point
  7. 561 downloads

    Spyro The Dragon - Prima's Official Strategy Guide (1998)
    1 point
  8. Retromags Presents! VideoGames & Computer Entertainment Issue 33 (October 1991) Database Record Download Directly! Scanned By: TheRedEye    Edited By: MigJmz    Follow us on...                         
    1 point
  9. 217 downloads

    Electronic Games LC2 Issue 31 (April 1995)
    1 point
  10. 218 downloads

    Electronic Games LC2 Issue 30 (March 1995)
    1 point
  11. 213 downloads

    Electronic Games LC2 Issue 29 (February 1995)
    1 point
  12. 230 downloads

    Electronic Games LC2 Issue 28 (January 1995)
    1 point
  13. 212 downloads

    Electronic Games LC2 Issue 27 (December 1994)
    1 point
  14. 203 downloads

    Electronic Games LC2 Issue 22 (July 1994)
    1 point
  15. 237 downloads

    Electronic Games LC2 Issue 21 (June 1994)
    1 point
  16. 207 downloads

    Electronic Games LC2 Issue 20 (May 1994)
    1 point
  17. 193 downloads

    Electronic Games LC2 Issue 19 (April 1994)
    1 point
  18. 204 downloads

    Electronic Games LC2 Issue 18 (March 1994)
    1 point
  19. 210 downloads

    Electronic Games LC2 Issue 14 (November 1993)
    1 point
  20. 205 downloads

    Electronic Games LC2 Issue 07 (April 1993)
    1 point
  21. 217 downloads

    Electronic Games LC2 Issue 05 (February 1993)
    1 point
  22. 204 downloads

    Electronic Games LC2 Issue 04 (January 1993)
    1 point
  23. 343 downloads

    Electronic Games LC2 Issue 26 (November 1994)
    1 point
  24. 309 downloads

    Electronic Games LC2 Issue 25 (October 1994)
    1 point
  25. Official U.S. PlayStation Magazine (usually abbreviated to OPM) is a monthly magazine devoted to entirely to Sony game platforms, including the PlayStation, PlayStation 2 and PSP systems. Reflecting the magazine's mature and hardcore readership, the magazine also features coverage on new technology and classic nerd pursuits, including anime. On November 14, 2006, Ziff Davis announced that the U.S. OPM would close with its January 2007 issue. History Despite its position in the marketplace, Sony's PlayStation did not have an official magazine in the U.S. until two years after it debuted in the region. In its place, there were two unofficial magazines covering the PS exclusively: Sendai's P.S.X., and Dimension Publishing's PSExtreme (originally titled Dimension P.S.X.). Over in the UK, meanwhile, Future Publishing signed an agreement with Sony Computer Entertainment Europe in 1995 to publish the Official PlayStation Magazine across the European continent, beginning with the UK edition in November 1995. This magazine included a Sony-sanctioned demo disc from the very first issue, and the UK edition was the highest-selling magazine in the country for nearly half a decade, only being supplanted by its successor, the Official UK PlayStation 2 Magazine. (The PS1-oriented OPM continued independently of the PS2 mag in the UK, running for over eight years until its final issue in March 2004.) In 1997, Sony Computer Entertainment America saw Future's success with OPM in the UK and decided to sanction a similar magazine for the US marketplace. Curiously, Future's US division (still called Imagine Publishing at the time) was not awarded the rights to publish the magazine; instead, the honor went to Ziff Davis Media, which had made P.S.X. a monthly magazine in 1997. (Imagine launched its own unofficial PlayStation magazine PSM a month before OPM debuted in the US.) The Disc OPM's main sell is the disc included with each issue, which includes game demos, preview movies, and other bits of game coverage. This disc was made for the PlayStation 1 at first; the first PlayStation 2 demo disc debuted with issue 49 in October 2001. The magazine then alternated between PS1 and PS2 discs for the next half-year; issue 54 (March 2002) was the last one with a PS1 disc included. Since OPM's newsstand sales traditionally live and die by the content of this disc, OPM's editors have more leeway on the cover design and internals of their magazine, giving it a sleek, avant-garde design unique among Ziff publications. Despite the disc, however, OPM's circulation has always lagged behind the lower-price PSM. OPM's average paid circulation for the period between January-June 2006 was 252,267.
    1 point
  26. 403 downloads

    File imported by an administrator
    1 point
  27. 342 downloads

    File imported by an administrator
    1 point
  28. 381 downloads

    File imported by an administrator
    1 point
  29. 331 downloads

    File imported by an administrator
    1 point
  30. 345 downloads

    File imported by an administrator
    1 point
  31. 350 downloads

    File imported by an administrator
    1 point
  32. 379 downloads

    File imported by an administrator
    1 point
  33. 384 downloads

    File imported by an administrator
    1 point
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