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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.
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Computer Gaming World, founded in 1981, stated in 1987 that it was the only survivor of 18 color magazines for computer games in 1984. [ 8 ] Meanwhile, in Japan, the first magazines entirely dedicated to video games began appearing from 1982, beginning with ASCII 's LOGiN , followed by several SoftBank publications and Kadokawa Shoten 's Comptiq .
Electronic Gaming Monthly Issue Year Month Game Reviews Features Other Contact 1 1989 May NARC (arcade), Hard Drivin' (arcade), Tecmo Bowl (NES), John Elway's Quarterback (NES), Star Soldier (NES), Mappy-Land (NES), Fist of the North Star (NES), Mystery Quest (NES), 1943: The Battle of Midway (NES), Racket Attack (NES), Ultima: Exodus (NES), Bubble Bobble (NES), Bump 'n' Jump (NES), Ys: The ...
GameNOW's roots began in July 1994 [1] when the popular magazine Electronic Gaming Monthly launched a spin-off magazine called EGM 2. EGM² was essentially "another EGM," only without a reviews section and a greater emphasis on import games.
GMR was a monthly magazine on video games that was published by Ziff-Davis — the publisher of such magazines as PC Magazine, Electronic Gaming Monthly, and Computer Gaming World (later Games for Windows: The Official Magazine). GMR was launched in February 2003, being sold in only the Electronics Boutique (EB) chain of video game stores. The ...
Electronic Games was the first dedicated video game magazine published in the United States [1] and ran from October 15, 1981, to 1997 under different titles. It was co-founded by Bill Kunkel , Joyce Worley, and Arnie Katz.
[6] [8] It was a runner-up for Electronic Gaming Monthly ' s Best Peripheral of 1996 (behind the Saturn analog controller). [14] Despite the media excitement over the device and its prominent appearance in Sega's marketing campaign, less than 1% of Saturn owners purchased the NetLink in 1996. [15]