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JHD

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JHD last won the day on December 20 2019

JHD had the most liked content!

About JHD

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  • Website URL
    www.chebucto.ns.ca/~ab443/home.html

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  • Retromags OnlyFans Member?
    No
  • Country
    ca
  • Location
    Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada
  • Interests
    Architecture, Canadian History, Classic Video Games
  • Favorite Previous/Retro Platform?
    Playstation 2

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  1. I utterly love this stuff! Thank-you for sharing. I am fairly certain that my Parents had this cookbook (though they were teenagers when it was published, so presumably it came from my Grandparents). There is a 7-Up game: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cool_Spot
  2. Personally, I most enjoy the magazine content that is not directly about games. For example, articles about how to get into the industry (job opportunities/requirements, discussions of various training programs), company profiles, interviews with major figures, etc. I also like the detailed strategy guides, but only for those games that I have, so just a small subset of the total
  3. Thank-you for posting this! Strategy guides are difficult to find (at least around here) and even more so for games that I have/want to play.
  4. As a former professional librarian, I love technical discussions like this! I have struggled many times this problem, especially when the library holds only a few scattered issues of a periodical or (as very often happens), the publisher itself makes a numbering error. Normally a volume consists of all of the issues published in a year, with the issues numbered sequentially therein; a volume can have from just 1 to 360+ issues (some daily newspapers used this numbering scheme). With irregular frequency publications, volumes may not be annual, but they are always sequential (e.g. Volume 1 is from 2015, volume 2 is from 2018 with nothing having been published in between). I have only ever seen whole numbers (numbered consecutively from Issue 1 to end of publication) with video game magazines. My only contribution concerns the dating of issues. Can we learn anything from the release dates of the games covered in the magazine? I once encountered a British game magazine with no dates listed anywhere (cover, masthead, copyright). Almost all of the games reviewed had been released within a few months of each other, however. Thus I was able to make a best guess as to when that issue was published.
  5. I recently unearthed my collection of ~150 physical cartridges from my storage unit where they have been languishing since 1998. I have an original 2600 (several different models, in fact), but nothing that I can easily connect to a modern TV. As soon as the 2600+ became available on amazon.ca, I placed my pre-order. With tax, it came to Cdn$172.49. There is no delivery charge.
  6. While privacy legislation (e.g. FOIP in Ontario) does not apply as there are no state actors involved, published material is explicitly excluded from the purview of the legislation in all Canadian jurisdictions. Therefore there is no legal requirement (or basis) to make redactions to something that has been published and made publicly available. Some years ago, I was a regular contributor to some (non-gaming) hobbyist magazines. I am no longer interested in that subject matter, but I am not embarrassed to admit that I once was. As for home addresses, young teenage me had a letter published in a 1984 issue of Hot Coco inviting people to contact me about text adventure games. I moved elsewhere in the late-1990s, and my Family sold the house in 2001. I do not much care that someone can discover where I lived 40 years ago. That very same address was also published in other sources in conjunction with my Father's business and a non-profit once operated by my Grandfather. (Heck, someone once showed up at the door seven years after Grandfather's death asking to meet with him.)
  7. So, Dave Halverson's veto on sharing the original Diehard Gamefan magazine does not extend to the relaunched magazine? I am certainly not complaining, but I also do not want this site to run afoul of any agreements.
  8. Library and Archives Canada holds the following issues. Holdings are obviously not complete, but we can at least confirm that these issues were published: 2002:Apr 2002:Jul 2002:Oct 2002: Autumn 2003:Jan 2003:Apr 2003:Sep 2003:Nov 2003:Dec 2004:Feb 2004:Jul 2004:Sep 2004:Oct 2004:Nov 2004:Dec 2005:Jan
  9. The feature article on video games reads very much like advertising copy -- just pick any system, they're all excellent -- but it was interesting to see the original prices for this stuff. There is a Parker Brother's advertisement that shows "The Incredible Hulk" game as forthcoming in July (1983). I was surprised how very many advertisements there were for various brands of cigarettes. Thank-you, @Phillyman and @E-Day for making this magazine available.
  10. This addition to the database deserves a like just on general principles!
  11. Thank-you for scanning this issue! While most issues of EGM are widely available, the last two years (or so) are not well represented online. Every bit to fill that gap is appreciated.
  12. I have been to Ottawa many times, but I was last in the Main Library around 2000. I have just checked the online library database, and it looks like these printed catalogues are no longer available. I was hoping that they would have continued to grow the collection to cover the debut of the 2600, Intellivision, etc.
  13. They cannot be disbound or scanning, but the Ottawa Public Library has bound copies of Eaton's catalogues from the 1970s onwards. When I was last there (quite some time ago), the collection did not extend into the 1980s -- so no video game listings -- but this is something else to be aware of. (And I use the 's intentionally even though the firm itself later abandoned it to better appeal to the Francophone market.)
  14. Was this the last one published? I do not recall having seen a Sears catalogue after about the 1980s. My Grandparents and Mother really loved them, but not my generation.
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