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VGI changed its title twice: in issue June 1983 to Videogaming and Computer Gaming Illustrated and in issue January 1984 to Video and Computer Gaming Illustrated. It began life as a bi-monthly publication before becoming a monthly publication. [1] Its short run has been explained by the video game crash of 1983. [2] [3] [4]
Computer and Video Games − UK magazine first published in 1981; Computer Gaming World − US PC magazine first published in 1981; Electronic Gaming Monthly − US magazine first published in 1989 ; GamePro − US magazine first published in 1989; These publications and others may be available from the WikiProject's reference library.
Electronic Gaming Monthly: 1989 2009 United States Sendai Publishing (1989–1996) Ziff Davis (1996–2009) Video game journalism [55] [56] Electronic Gaming Monthly: 2010 2015 United States EGM Media Video game journalism [57] Expert Gamer (formerly EGM² [1994–1998]) 1994 2001 United States Sendai Publishing (1994–1996) Ziff Davis (1996 ...
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Rest of the Crap (). Retro (plot of the Resident Evil series). JimmyBlackwing, Thibbs: 225 2008 February Burnout: Paradise, NFL Tour, Harvey Birdman: Attorney at Law, Samurai Warriors: Katana, Unreal Tournament 3, Kingdom Under Fire: Circle of Doom, Culdcept Saga, Nanostray 2, Pursuit Force: Extreme Justice, Haze, Sonic Riders: Zero Gravity, Endless Ocean, Final Fantasy XI: Wings of the ...
Video game consoles had reached the 16-bit era with the ability to support higher resolution graphics. Alongside this, video games had started to draw older players, creating a market for games with more mature content, both on home consoles and in arcades. [2] During this period, two key players were Nintendo and Sega.
GameNOW (occasionally abbreviated to GN) was a United States-based video game magazine that was published by Ziff-Davis from November 2001 to January 2004. A total of 27 issues were published. In addition to video game consoles like PlayStation 2, Xbox, GameCube, and Game Boy Advance, GameNOW also covered games for personal computers.
The bill called for a federal mandate enforcement of the Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) ratings system for video games in order to protect children from inappropriate content. [ 1 ] The FEPA would have imposed fines of US$1000 or 100 hours of community service for a first time offense of selling a "Mature" or "Adult-Only" rated ...