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tearatherflesh

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About tearatherflesh

  • Birthday 03/26/1987

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  • Retromags OnlyFans Member?
    No
  • Favorite Current Generation Platform?
    PC
  • Favorite Previous/Retro Platform?
    Nintendo 64

Previous Fields

  • Playing Right Now
    MORTAL KOMBAT 1 / TEKKEN 8 / PRIMAL RAGE / KILLER INSTINCT GOLD
  • Video Games Favorites
    MORTAL KOMBAT 11 / SUPER CASTLEVANIA IV / TUROK 2 / MASS EFFECT 1 / FINAL FANTASY XIII

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  1. For like a decade, I'd have a recurring dream of finding a box full of 90s video game mags for sale, mostly Game Players (funny, check it out if you never have, namely the issues from 1995 onward. Chris Slate was the editor, of later PSM and Nintendo Power fame) and Next Generation, which were my favorites as a kid and are notably harder to find than other mags. I'd wake up soooo upset. This website made those dreams a realty. A HEARTFELT THANKS TO ALL WHO MADE THIS POSSIBLE!
  2. 1) GamePlayers - Under Chris Slate, this magazine became increasingly "adult" and edgy in the mid-90's with jokes everywhere, curse words, and a weird, elaborate inside joke about a winged ape and his apocalyptic entourage. Fun to read as a kid, and they hold up even now, in my opinion. Until I found this site, I would literally dream of finding back issues online or at a garage sale. 2) Next Generation - Lots of interesting editorials or interviews that you would normally only see in more adult-oriented PC magazines, except in an adult-oriented multi-platform magazine. Features on game development, predictions about technology, and retrospectives digging into the history of gaming really quenched my thirst for un-biased, in-depth information in a proto-internet world. Informative and relevant even today. 3) Nintendo Power - Biased as hell, but definitely set a standard for me that other magazines often failed to meet. This includes cover stories that were always more than 2 pages long, in-depth strategy sections for brand new games, and some nice subscriber perks like cards, an expanded January issue, and discounts on the tantalizing merch catalog. 4) EGM - I've always really liked the review format that gives multiple (and sometimes vastly different) opinions about new games, as well as the classic "Good, Bad, and Ugly" takes. The addition of the humorous "Hsu and Chan" illustrations and features was icing on the cake for me. 5) incite - Super short-lived magazine with an overly-subjective review feature that I liked (would list similar games that are better and worse than the game being reviewed) and some entertaining features and interviews with celebrities or models that gave me a wider view of the expanding gamer culture.
  3. Wow, thanks! You really made my day! And also, thank you for all of your hard work scanning stuff!
  4. I saw that Incite #1 was "Acquired" and I mistakenly thought Computer Gaming World #181 was also "Acquired!" In that regard, voting on "Acquired" magazines could help in prioritizing which ones to scan first. Otherwise, yeah, I agree...voting on "Missing" magazines just seems futile (although I do have Computer Gaming World #181 in the black hole of storage at my parents' house). In a perfect world, I'd be flippin' through some old 90s issues of Diehard GameFan too, but...that's not likely to happen, since I can never find those mags for sale, nor are they even allowed on this site! Oh well, can't be greedy...
  5. The "Vote to Preserve" button doesn't seem to work anymore! I was gonna vote for Computer Gaming World Issue 181 and Incite Video Gaming Issue 1!
  6. I remember the tips from the video game developers in this issue blowing me away at the time. Simple design strategies like, "Make a list of all the things you can do in a game...does that sound like fun to you?" will always stick in my mind. Great article. Plus there's the review compendium section that's a fun, quick way to see how all the next gen games at the time stacked up against each other.
  7. Hello tearatherflesh, Welcome to the Retromags Community!

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