Game magazines
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That is indeed true, nowadays it is much more profitable to get informed about new developments or specific things through online magazines or articles posted on trusted websites, which, as you rightly say, have more information, better editing in general, better illustrations and deal with deeper aspects than those dealt with in physical magazines aimed at a more general public among which there are knowledgeable people and not so knowledgeable about the subject. That is irrefutable. -
My first magazine was a PCManía in 1996. I liked it for the CDs that for me were like the Internet of the time: I liked to explore them and discover the thousands of shareware programs and playable demos that were on them. In fact, I spent a few years surviving on playable demos and trial programs for which I had to change the time of the PC so that they would believe that 30 days had not passed. As for the magazines, I didn't pay much attention to them to be honest.
At this time, a Micromanía would occasionally fall into my hands because their CDs were only of playable demos! The thing is that with the 20 duros that my parents gave me a week, there was no possibility but to buy one every x months and choose the right one: the one with the CD cover that was the most colorful and pretty, whether it was PCManía or Micromanía :ugly:
A little later I moved to PCActual, of which I have a pretty good collection, and these I read almost from top to bottom. I bought it every month from 1999 to 2002 (I think). From there on, I bought one every few months until I stopped doing so.
In my house we had the Internet for the first time in 2000 and over time I learned to handle it, finding information and programs not in trial version but complete ones, and the magazines began to cease to be interesting to me (and Hardlimit has a great deal of guilt in that).
Today it has been many years since I bought any magazine and I don't plan to do so. Occasionally, one or another has fallen, but not much.
By the way, I have all the CDs saved and the truth is that when I see them I get melancholic. The magazines of PCManía and Micromanía have all disappeared and it is something that I would have liked to preserve because they are almost historical documents of the field of computer science. It is entertaining to occasionally take a look at some article about the revolution that SLOT 1 represents, how AMD has broken the psychological barrier of GHz, how they screw Windows Me, or how with 32 lines RDSI one can achieve the whopping 2 Mbps, but that is a speed so high that it is not useful to anyone…
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I have also read those, apart from the software they provided, it must be acknowledged that computing was much more complicated back then. These 200-page magazines taught you a lot of things that were impossible to deduce or discover because the software used to be much less intuitive.
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Current PCs were pretty good back in the day too, and I still have quite a few issues and some more from the AxelSpringer publishing house, which were the magazines I read until I could connect to the internet from 6 pm XDD, because if you didn't, they'd cut you off at 15.
Mostly, what I bought were electronic music magazines that came with a bunch of trial software to try out.
But as for games, I like Foros micromania as you say, and I don't know what's on the market now. -
Entertaining debate … The truth is that I buy Micromanía out of a certain romanticism. I had all of the first era (which I lost miserably for reasons that don't matter ¬¬) and I got hooked again in the fourth era because it still has a certain charm to open the new magazine, see the images and the excited descriptions of the new games.
The structure of the information with the different sections is interesting for a complete reading, which you don't generally find on internet sites. There is no doubt that for looking up information on a specific game, the Internet is much better, but as a "general" reading, I still like to browse a magazine.
I usually take books to read on trips (and with the kindle now you can imagine), but when you get up early to be in Barcelona at 8:00, you spend the day working and return at eight in the evening, you don't feel like a serious reading and magazines in that case are great alternatives.
Apart from Micromanía, I regularly consume Muy Interesante and La Aventura de la Historia, but I was looking for something more.
I share what is edited by Marca... the more I read, the more I get the feeling that, either they are written for short people or for short people or both... and I beg that their regular readers don't take offense, but it's just that, really...
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I agree with Iforos that the magazine format is (or at least if it is of quality, it must be) an entertaining read to pass the time, not a treatise on quantum physics.
As I said before, I think the magazine that I have been buying for the longest time was MicroHobby. In those times, when I was young and healthy
and I was addicted to my Spectrum that made my senses spin :ugly:
The magazine came with a cassette :ffu: with playable demos of the most cutting-edge games.
As cobito says, this custom still remains and there are magazines that include the programs they talk about. Which are usually, at the very least, curious to take a look at.Call me optimistic, but when I read a magazine, it is true that most of its content sounds familiar to me or seems basic. But in all of them I discover some detail that is new to me. It is a bit like when Packo changes something on the forum and invites us to look for the change :wall: suddenly you discover new things, from a forum that you enter every day.
regards
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Well, for me to get informed, nothing beats the Great Web, but I understand that many magazines of all kinds are sold, because they have to leave us something in the waiting rooms of so many professionals (workshops, lawyers, dentists, …), that the batteries of our mobile phones and portable consoles have a limit ;D
Cheers!
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Man if you want to read about games and stuff, now you can download wikipedia :troll:
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Well, having turned out to be somewhat prescient, Axel Springer has indeed gotten rid of Micromanía. They have announced that they will create an independent publishing house to publish it again in September, but for now it has not been published and there is no news about it.
Such a shame...
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It reminds me of when they stopped publishing what was then their sister magazine Micro Hobby. I still have that last issue, and in its editorial they talked about trying to revive it by looking for other options, such as quarterly editions or similar things, but it was more wishful thinking than reality, since the Spectrum was becoming an outdated machine.
The case of Micro Manía is not very different, since the PC is still a current and very valid platform although some want to destroy it, but the network prevails over written media and they will not be able to change that.
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