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Author Topic: Retro Gamer  (Read 3776 times)

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DickTurpin

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Retro Gamer
« on: July 11, 2013, 11:22:22 am »
Great little British magazine covering all things non mame retro.

Original games/companies. Whole lot of info.

Great look backs at games and their creators plus homebrew games as well.

Any of you guys read RG?

Every now and then they have a great great issue like the one on Bubble Bobble
Edited: added a pic and:
Also has a global focus so its not about British but can be a lot of stuff on US developers and Sega / Nintendo etc.
« Last Edit: July 11, 2013, 11:25:06 am by DickTurpin »

Malenko

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Re: Retro Gamer
« Reply #1 on: July 11, 2013, 11:49:45 am »
yeah they sell it at Barnes and Noble right next to the super dooshie Mac section of mags. Ive bought a couple of them, but at $10 a pop its too pricey to buy it every month.
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chopperthedog

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Re: Retro Gamer
« Reply #2 on: July 11, 2013, 03:01:38 pm »
Heh, we lose one bubble bobble fan and gain another.... Or did we.



good day.

DickTurpin

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Re: Retro Gamer
« Reply #3 on: July 12, 2013, 04:03:16 am »
Chopper. I think there are always a lot of Bubble Bobble fans out there.
Good Day  ;D

DickTurpin

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Re: Retro Gamer
« Reply #4 on: July 12, 2013, 04:11:16 am »
yeah they sell it at Barnes and Noble right next to the super dooshie Mac section of mags. Ive bought a couple of them, but at $10 a pop its too pricey to buy it every month.

The digital edition (assuming PDF) is $4.50
In the UK you can subscribe now for 5 issues for £5. Without a commitment to continue after this expires. 

Felsir

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Re: Retro Gamer
« Reply #5 on: July 12, 2013, 04:23:50 am »
I wish there were more of the old special editions of EDGE magazine:

Especially the "Making of..." retro edition is a very good read.

Malenko

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Re: Retro Gamer
« Reply #6 on: July 12, 2013, 09:29:59 am »
The digital edition (assuming PDF) is $4.50
In the UK you can subscribe now for 5 issues for £5. Without a commitment to continue after this expires.

Im in the US, and I refuse to buy a "digital magazine" there's a better name for a digital magazine, its called "a website".

£5 = $7.5 so the mark up isnt bad @$9.99 , I just buy the ones that have a lot of content I'm super interested in.
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DickTurpin

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Re: Retro Gamer
« Reply #7 on: July 12, 2013, 10:11:57 am »
Fair play. I used to only get it occasionally when I was married didn't have the spare cash for it. £5 is still a chunk of change but now I have it on subs. I have had £25 worth for £5 in the offer so I've done alright this year.

Cynicaster

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Re: Retro Gamer
« Reply #8 on: July 15, 2013, 04:41:53 pm »
Great magazine--really well put together. 


edekoning

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Re: Retro Gamer
« Reply #9 on: September 04, 2013, 03:07:20 am »
Thanks for the tip guys. I bought about 3 issues now, and really enjoy reading it. Although trying to find a store that actually sells it was quite annoying.

kiwasabi

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Re: Retro Gamer
« Reply #10 on: September 04, 2013, 06:52:10 am »
Thanks for the tip guys. I bought about 3 issues now, and really enjoy reading it. Although trying to find a store that actually sells it was quite annoying.

I love it, it's the only real magazine I still buy. I guess it only makes sense to read about retro games in a truly retro format huh? Barnes and Noble is the only store I've found that carries it.

paigeoliver

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Re: Retro Gamer
« Reply #11 on: September 04, 2013, 10:10:40 am »
yeah they sell it at Barnes and Noble right next to the super dooshie Mac section of mags. Ive bought a couple of them, but at $10 a pop its too pricey to buy it every month.

The digital edition (assuming PDF) is $4.50
In the UK you can subscribe now for 5 issues for £5. Without a commitment to continue after this expires.

I would buy digital magazine if the publishers didn't try to quadruple their profits on them. The publisher sells a $10 cover price magazine to the distributor for about $3 and it costs them probably $2 to print it. The publisher makers a dollar. Distributor sells it to the bookstore for more and they sell it for $10. Publisher sells the PDF straight to the consumer, their costs run about 4 cents. But they inexplicably want $4.50.

The publishers of every form of media are doing this. Desperately trying to uphold or hold close to retail store pricing on digital releases. I haven't bought any music since 1999. If they sold an MP3 album for the same $1.50 they ended up with after costs  from a physical album I would buy music all the time. Instead they try to sell the things for the same price as the CD.

It seems like video game publishers are the only ones starting to get the digital distribution idea. Even then they still try to hold those retail price points on release day.
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edekoning

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Re: Retro Gamer
« Reply #12 on: September 05, 2013, 03:06:25 am »
Barnes and Noble is the only store I've found that carries it.

I don;t think we have those in the Netherlands :)

@paigeoliver

Tax may also influence the price difference between physical and digital goods. At least in the Netherlands the tax on a physical books/magazines is 6%, but that same product in digital form is taxed 21% :dizzy:

paigeoliver

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Re: Retro Gamer
« Reply #13 on: September 07, 2013, 10:11:36 am »
Barnes and Noble is the only store I've found that carries it.

I don;t think we have those in the Netherlands :)

@paigeoliver

Tax may also influence the price difference between physical and digital goods. At least in the Netherlands the tax on a physical books/magazines is 6%, but that same product in digital form is taxed 21% :dizzy:

In the US the digital release isn't taxes at all in most cases.
Acceptance of Zen philosophy is marred slightly by the nagging thought that if all things are interconnected, then all things must be in some way involved with Pauly Shore.