Print Gaming Magazines Doomed? 58
Joystiq has a pair of interesting posts up looking at the future of print gaming publications. Besides positing on the future of the print media, they discuss subscription and reach rates for some of the major U.S. magazines. From that piece: "Game Informer really is several times larger than their nearest competitor. How did they manage that? And why the heck is the Official U.S. Playstation Magazine passed around so much than all the other publications?" I wonder what the differences are between here and abroad? In the UK, for example, there are a large number of publications, all of which seem to have avid readerships. (Though, with magazines like Edge and PC Gamer UK, it's hard not to see why.)
Print = Legacy (Score:1)
Re:Print = Legacy (Score:1)
Re:Print = Legacy (Score:1)
Electronic versions are much more convenient and accessible.
Re:Print = Legacy (Score:1)
I have no clue about your locale, but around here, there are MANY places where there are no open net connections, so the newspaper is much easier to use.
Re:Print = Legacy (Score:1)
I live downtown in the center on my region's metro area, so net access isn't a problem.
Re:Print = Legacy (Score:2)
You can read newspapers anywhere, but you can only read websites when you're at internet-enabled computers.
Re:Print = Legacy (Score:1)
Re:Print = Legacy (Score:2)
Better writing online (Score:1)
Surprise? (Score:1)
Re:Surprise? (Score:5, Insightful)
If nothing else, news sources are having to compete to keep readers, but just like audio books haven't destroyed the book market, I don't see people clamoring for the newest Robert Jordan novel in electronic form.
I wouldn't blame schools- schools don't teach children to use the computer to read things, they teach them to use them for word processing, etc.- and print copies. Libraries, with limited computers in most schools, encourage students to print material for later reference (and to open up workstations). Computers are excellent for interactive things, but if I'm reading a 200 page treatise on something, I'd rather have a paper copy I can mark up, take with me on the bus, or read in bed without needing a notebook.
Some tips (Score:2, Informative)
About schools. They don't seem to publish much in the way of disclosing what they teach children, which is a real pity. Then there's the whole grade system. Y
Re:Some tips (Score:2)
Re:Think of the scribes! (Score:2)
Do we still use clay tablets or papyrus?
Or how about bamboo reeds or sheep skin?
Reading online is still reading.
Knowing how to read today is more important that it was even 10, 20, or even 100 years ago because of computer. Heck, I daresay in a given day I generate more text than a scribe in the middle ages a month.
yeah, and? (Score:2)
People Still Like Owning Things (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:People Still Like Owning Things (Score:4, Informative)
Re:People Still Like Owning Things (Score:2)
Re:People Still Like Owning Things (Score:2)
I'm gonna have to pass I think until I can be sure that it won't upload a rootkit to my PC to prevent any attempts to back it up.
become less mainstream, maybe... (Score:3, Interesting)
I'll be the first to say "you cant take it to the bathroom". But, as a subscriber to PC Gamer, I like the magazine. I have a job. I own a house. I do not have time to troll the internet looking at every review site under the sun. Boom, once a month I get a magazine, full of pretty pictures and (to me) well written articles that are both humorous and honest.
I also get Rolling Stone, yet I don't see articles talking about how that is going out of print anytime soon. (and it better not, I shelled out $50 bucks a few years ago to become a subscriber for life!)
Re:become less mainstream, maybe... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:become less mainstream, maybe... (Score:3, Funny)
Nintendo Power (Score:4, Insightful)
everything is doomed (Score:2, Funny)
UK Circulation Data (Score:4, Informative)
Official Playstation 2 (Future Publishing Ltd) 133,242
Official UK Xbox Magazine (Future Publishing Ltd) 85,072
Games Master (Future Publishing Ltd) 55,388
PC Gamer (Future Publishing Ltd) 48,326
Nintendo Official Magazine (EMAP Active Limited) 37,760
Edge (Future Publishing Ltd) 31,078
Games TM (Highbury-Entertainment Ltd) 20,117
Re:UK Circulation Data (Score:1)
Gaming Magazines (Score:4, Insightful)
However, for gaming magazines, I have a feeling that most of their content will move to an online medium. Gaming in general implies electronic devices (not including board games). Since the audience is already familiar with technology, moving magazines to an electronic medium makes sense. I forsee that online strategy guides with images and links will be the "soup du jour". Of course all this exists now but will be more prevalent in the future. It's been a while since I have read a gaming magazine and to be honest, the reason I quit was lack of actual depth within the article. Certainly, I don't expect much from a game review or news on the latest hardware but sometimes I want something a little more. The writing in these magazines is severely lacking.
However, just recently, I did find one online magazine that actually had some depth and the writers some talent, The Escapist [escapist.com]. Hopefully this is an example of what's to come when the majority of the magazines move online. Something that is not just reviews but actual journalism as well.
Re:Gaming Magazines (Score:2)
http://www.escapistmagazine.com/ [escapistmagazine.com]
Re:Gaming Magazines (Score:2)
And since we're suggesting urls, here's my favourite: http://www.wayoftherodent.com/ [wayoftherodent.com]. Great gaming magazine, with a definite retro flair.
Re:Gaming Magazines (Score:2)
Exactly. There will, for a very very long time, always be a portion of the population who prefer print media. However, that market is shrinking.
In addition, the nature of publishing is changing. Magazines that depend upon subscribers for a large majority of their revenue are having trouble staying afloat -- people don't want to pay a lot for content
I would never give them up (Score:2)
Shove Game Informer down your throat! (Score:1)
Re:Shove Game Informer down your throat! (Score:2)
Re:Shove Game Informer down your throat! (Score:2)
It's all about value... (Score:2)
You get what you pay for (Score:2)
Re:You get what you pay for (Score:2)
Re:You get what you pay for (Score:2)
Lifetime subscriber (Score:2, Interesting)
UK game mags (Score:2, Insightful)
Ads ads ads (Score:1)
Re:Ads ads ads (Score:2)
CELL PHONE GAMES!
The subscription was free when I signed up for Gamefly, but I stall canceled it after that junk.
it's cos gaming mags suck (Score:2)
I stopped buying game mags years ago because they all seem to be giving good reviews to bad games because they have special deals with distributors or publishers.
online mags to me, tho, are just as bad. I don't read them either.
I buy a game because I think it looks or sounds good and I make my own decisions. I never let my opinion be swayed by biased game "journos."
Don't blame the medium. Blame the articles. (Score:2, Interesting)
However, I have completely stopped reading gaming magazines. It's not that they've stopped being useful. Oh wait, that's exactly it. Gaming mag
Most Advertising Still Goes to Mags - For Now (Score:2)
What about Highbury? (Score:1)
GameInformer and GameStop (Score:2)
Very easily. For a long time, you got a free subscription to Game Informer whenever you signed up for the Used-Games club at GameStop (a very large national retailer with many, many small neighborhood shops). So, for a year or so, I got the magazine in the mail. I actually liked it better than websites when it talked about games. Obviously, for E3 news, print will always lag behind, but it's nice to sit d
Magazines are great (Score:2)
So it was declared long ago. (Score:2)
Bruce