Future Publishing Loses $96 Million 53
Gamasutra covers a large reported loss by Future Publishing, the UK games-mag publisher of outlets like Edge, the three official UK magazines, and the U.S. Official Xbox Magazine. Their pre-tax losses totaled $95.6 million, while profits were down $39.8 million to $26.7 million. From the article: "Future CEO Stevie Spring commented, 'It is clear with hindsight that during the past two years, Future over-invested in acquisitions and under-invested in organic development. The consequences of this strategy are clearly evident in today's disappointing results ... We have taken a number of steps to strengthen the business. These actions have created significant cost savings which we are fully re-investing in the business.'" More regrettable signs of a a fading print industry.
Meh (Score:2)
Or maybe I've just become bored of their endless fanboi masturbatory habits. I can't speak for the magazines listed in the blurb but I don't see a real value to gaming mags that spend as much time patting themselves on the back as they do giving real content about games.
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PC Gamer died years ago when they merged with PC Accelerator. The PC Gaming industry went with them.
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Oh the ironing... (Score:1, Funny)
And amazingly, this was posted on Slashdot, without any sense of irony.
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The UK edition is great. Why anyone with a choice would ever read the US edition I will never understand.
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Oh I couldn't agree more.
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While I see where you're going with this I will say that for a lot of year between HL1 and HL2 WW2 shooters were the only FPS (IMHO, of course) that got consistantly better. I'd take the original MOH over BF2 at this point because it was that good. Graphically? no, but it seemed like better game play to me. Again, IMHO.
Nothing personal, just business. (Score:2, Interesting)
More regrettable signs of a a fading print industry.
I'm not so sure I'm inclined to agree with that. While the print industry may be shrinking I think this has more to do with a less than stellar product and as the story indicates has much to do with poor business decisions.
I read the Official Xbox Magazine from time to time and it's quality in comparison with other publications is severely lacking. Of course that's just my opinion.
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Though they do things a little backwards, you buy it in the store and
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Not so with OXM... When I got my first issue in after subscribing I felt like I was kicked in the nuts, sort of a "ha ha, we've already got your money so we're giving you the cheapest product possible". I even called them up to see if I could get the newsstand quality issues for a few ext
Blame the fanboy-ish writing (Score:2)
Post-launch, in the hands of the customer, people
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I don't need to pay extra for that - I can find it myself.
Good writers (what happened to them in the mid 90s? Not getting paid I expect) and some insight, rather than plain fact reporting is enough to get me
PC Gamer too (Score:2)
Not surprising. (Score:2, Insightful)
When Internet access in the UK was through metered 56K modem, reading the latest game news could be quite expensive. Downloading demos, patches, add-ons, drivers, etc, would also give your phone bill a nasty bump.
Now that most PC gamers have broadband access, they can read the latest news imm
Internet + Aging Magazine Readers (Score:2, Insightful)
Also I don't want to read crap written for teenagers. I didn't want to when I was a teenager, but back then computing magazines were far more grown up.
Future Publishing started off with Amstrad Action some 21 years ago. It will be a shame to see them die (inevitable within a f
Accounting Math (Score:5, Informative)
And this is using Generally Accepted Accounting Practices (GAAP), not Hollywood/Government style accounting.
thanks for that (Score:2)
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Linux Format (Score:1)
Stevie (Score:2)
Start working on that resume...
why do people read magazines? (Score:2)
Bathroom (Score:1)
That's the only excuse I can think of. You read magazines because either you don't have a laptop, you don't have Wifi, or you don't have to go to the bathroom. Any one of those three probably makes you a freak, though.
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Another reason is that with subscriptions on ebay being so cheap, it isn't that big of a deal to subscribe to them. I think I got 3 years of PC Gamer for $9.99. That's basically 30 cents an issue. At that price, why not?
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During the course of my daily life, I don't have access to the internet all the time. It's not available while I'm walking. It's not available when I'm waiting for the doctor/client/etc. I also don't have a laptop (don't need one, not for my line of work), so even if it was available I won't have access to it until I sat down at a desktop computer.
Magazines, pamphlets, and books don't requir
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I recently read somewhere about NYT expecting to release a newsreader for their paper which presents the content in basically the same way as dead-tree paper. If that was available for the gaming mags I like to read, I wouldn't bother with the waste of dead-tree mags.
Computer Magazines are not dead, just crap (Score:2)
Computer Magazines are not dead, they still have a viable business, but they are just crap.
The problem with most computer magazines:
1. CD of crap Windows shareware. Even Linux magazines have CDs that I could just download.
2. Old News, they should not bother with news as by the time it gets to the stand, I have read it all on Slashdot two weeks before.
3. Not enough in-depth features. Most mags seem to be written for the causal buyer. There are only so many
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They don't only do Computer mags (Score:2)
So now, I hardly ever buy PC mags. I do, on the other hand, still have a subscription to Guitarist magazine, and I know Future do four or five
No, the cat does not "got my tongue." (Score:1)
> of...the U.S. Official Xbox Magazine. Their pre-tax losses
> totaled $95.6 million, while profits were down $39.8 million to $26.7 million
"Future Publishing officials admitted they probably shouldn't have followed Microsoft's business model for the Xbox when designing their Xbox magazine."
OMG! (Score:1)
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IIRC its predecessor "ACE" magazine was less self-conscious but that could be nostalgia talking.
In my brief visits to the USA I couldn't find any serious video games magazines, just the advert compilations. Next Generation's demise might be taken as showing there is little call for that sort of thin
More of the same... (Score:2)
It's either that or the writers gloat about how they're in the industry and get their hands on everything before the average consumer does. They barely put any effort into print quality so that I can clear
They publish other stuff too... (Score:2)
I have had a subscription to one of their cross-stitch magazines for nearly 5 years now. They are quite strong in the crafts market. The have plenty of titles that are nothing to do with computers or gaming.
They completely cornered the cross-stitch market (Score:2)