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Some media outlets compared the 2023-2024 layoffs to the video game crash of 1983, when the US video game market collapsed due to an oversaturation of poorly made, low-quality games, causing the video game industry to enter a recession for two years. This has sparked discussions about a potential "second video game crash."
Video game journalism (also called games journalism or video game criticism) is a specialized branch of journalism that covers various aspects of video games, including game reviews, industry news, and player culture, typically following a core "reveal–preview–review" cycle.
Halo.bungie.org received about 600,000 page views a day in 2007. The site covers game news and rumors, strategy, fan-made machinima, stories and art, contests and forums. [1] In the site's early years, it received only a small amount of fan-submitted material, which ballooned and made constant site maintenance a challenge. [5]
The Game Awards, honoring the best video games of the year, was held at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles. [68] 19 Sony and Kadokawa Corporation, the parent company of FromSoftware, Spike Chunsoft and Acquire, agreed to form a strategic business alliance, with Sony becoming the largest shareholder in Kadokawa. [69]
Pages in category "Video game news websites" The following 60 pages are in this category, out of 60 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9.
Electronic Gaming Monthly (EGM) is a monthly American video game magazine. [2] [3] [4] It offers video game news, coverage of industry events, interviews with gaming figures, editorial content and product reviews.
Unlike most video game websites, Giant Bomb does not heavily cover industry news from a business perspective. During an interview on X-Play, Gerstmann said that he thought video game websites had become too focused on the business side of games, and that game news had become "stale" in the process. "We want to get out there and talk about games ...
Shacknews was founded in 1996 by Steve Gibson. [2] [3] The website, originally named 'Quakeholio', was dedicated to the then-upcoming ID Software game Quake. [4]FileShack, a spinoff-site for game demos, patches, videos, and miscellaneous game-related assets for Shacknews users and others, was launched in August 2002.