Cubed is
a monthly gaming magazine from the team of volunteers at Cubed Gamers, offering the best in reviews, comment and features about the games industry.
Cubed is
a monthly gaming magazine from the team of volunteers at Cubed Gamers, offering incisive, independent and international reviews, comment and features about the games industry.
Not exact matches
It was 1992 and print was still alive and well with most people relying on
monthly magazines for their
gaming info.
To longtime video game enthusiasts, Mielke is known for his tenure as editor - in - chief of Electronic
Gaming Monthly magazine and its sister website, 1UP.com.
Ziff Davis, which used to own
gaming magazines like Electronic Gaming Monthly and Computer Gaming World, acquired IGN in
gaming magazines like Electronic
Gaming Monthly and Computer Gaming World, acquired IGN in
Gaming Monthly and Computer
Gaming World, acquired IGN in
Gaming World, acquired IGN in 2013.
Plus, given that the series is * actually * serialized in the
monthly gaming - themed Shueisha
magazine V - Jump, you don't have to put up with it every issue.
Accolades for the franchise include PlayStation: The Official
Magazine (Editor's Choice Award), Game Informer (Action / Adventure Game of the Year and Handheld Game of the Month Award), Electronic
Gaming Monthly (Best PS2 Game), IGN.com (Editor's Choice Award and Game of the Year Award), and four nominations in the Annual Interactive Achievement Awards, including Overall Game of the Year and Console Game of the Year.
With American
magazine publisher Ziff Davis announcing yesterday that it was giving the print version of PC World the (financial) boot come rumblings that Electronic
Gaming Monthly might meet the same fate.
EGMNow is the online offshoot of what used to be Electronic
Gaming Monthly, which was (as far as I know) the first news
magazine for video games.
It was 1992 and print was still alive and well with most people relying on
monthly magazines for their
gaming info.
At a time when
monthly video game
magazines were the only source of
gaming info, newsletters were a real treat.
As I mentioned before (briefly), my first paid writing gig was for Hardcore Gamer
Magazine, a monthly publication that rose from the ashes of Diehard GameFan, an infamous gaming magazine from th
Magazine, a
monthly publication that rose from the ashes of Diehard GameFan, an infamous
gaming magazine from th
magazine from the 1990s.
As a spin - off of Electronic
Gaming Monthly, the issues used a format very similar to the parent
magazine.
The passing of the original Electronic
Gaming Monthly video game
magazine brought tears to many a gamer, but through some impressive financial maneuvers the editorial was able to revive itself under transferred management, and is set to be fully revitalized in the consumer market.