Another gorgeous cover that folds out to reveal a map of a sonic level on the front and a Sonic Time Line on the back
Some of the Features
Treasure special (8 pages) An interview with Michel Ancel (Rayman fame) Guide to Smash TV The Making of North & South A feature on the making of the Untouchables
Plus all the usuals
Future Classic Minority Report Import Only The Classic Game
Oh and a review of some Zelda game on the 3DS
Last edited by qupe on Fri Mar 02, 2012 2:20 pm, edited 3 times in total.
Dig Dug wrote:I was about to make this. I thought the cover was a bit horrid to be honest.
The front part is ok, but I like the fold out bit more, which is still part of the cover. I was torn on it at first.
Loads in this issue though.
Didn't realise there were only 50000 copies of Ikaruga on the Dreamcast, just selling mine too, justs sits in a box so may as well and have it on the Xbox.
It's out on the 23rd to coincide with Sonic's birthday apparently Suscribers get them earlier than the official date of publication, I'm paying to advertise in it and I still don't get an early copy, so a definate bonus to suscribing.
Check out my quarter page advert somewhere in the back few pages.
Didn't want to make another thread, but I picked up Retro Gamer 95 yesterday. Will be taking up the subscription offer I think, which is £1 for the first three issues, then £21 every 6 months, which works out at just £3.50 per issue! Retro Gamer 96 will feature a "world exclusive" article on the making of Final Fantasy VII, which should be interesting. I wonder what they have planned for Retro Gamer 100...
I've got all 4 of these now, along with 4 of the 5 Retro Gamer Collection books (I need issue 3). They go for a decent amount on eBay, so they're definitely worth the investment.
hi My Retro Gamer 91 arrived this morning. I've had a quick flick through and have seen:
Mashed Turtles: A review of this party game.
Deathchase: A mention to this is given in the "What's Brewing?" section.
And last and absolutely the best of all, we have an interview with Jason Kendall (Gwobby) in the "Homebrew Heroes" section.
I love this magazine, every month I wait to see what the front cover is, just like when I was a child with 'New Atari User'. Though, I must admit, I'm in the camp of people of who do not read it from start to finish - there are too many modern computer games mentioned. Right about now, Retro Gamer issue 91 should be hitting the shelves of select stores across the UK and it’s another superb cover with a foil coating along with a Sonic map and timeline within the folds. This issue, the RG team has plenty of content to celebrate the 20th Anniversary of Sonic the Hedgehog, which coincidently was released on the Mega Drive on the 23rd of June 1991. Elsewhere, there are other articles to look forward to, including The Ultimate Guide to… Smash TV, three Making of… features (Bugaboo, North & South and The Untouchables), Spectrum Games That Time Forgot, From The Archives: Treasure, In the Chair With… Michel Ancel, Classic Games (Solomon’s Key & Total Eclipse), the usual regulars and more.
As usual, the issue is also available to purchase online, in physical and digital versions, at the Imagine eshop. Make sure to get the full lowdown of the issue, including accompanying commentary, from editor Darran Jones with his preview video clip as he flicks through the pages.
Rapidly-Greying wrote:A certain handsome 35 year old man is quoted twice this issue,his first time in a magazine since a copy of Your Sinclair many years ago.
Clive Sinclair has to be older than 35 now, surely....
Got my first subscription copy this week, issue 97. Has a great article on the covertape wars of the late 1980s/early 1990s. Another gorgeous cover by Oliver Frey, too. Next month's issue looks like another cracker, with features on the Metal Slug, the Game Gear and Alundra.
Been reading issue 99 over the past day or so, great stuff! Really liked the interview with the Another World creator, as well as the C64 vs Spectrum debate (fascinating even to someone like me who was born after those systems were in their prime). Not to mention the feature on Golden Axe
I thought the article was a little unfair to the Speccy, to be honest.
Timex was pushing the speccy as a business machine in the us, under the Timex Sinclair brand. The reason why the "Spectrum" was "nowhere" in the US is that it wasn't called a Spectrum!
It still didn't do too well, though, which I put down to the fact that even if Timex had been pushing it as a home micro, it'd still have had an uphill battle vs. the Apple 2 and Tandys, which were very similar styles of machine.
It also ignored the Speccys considerable afterlife in Russia. Indeed, it wasn't all that long ago that someone reverse-engineered and re-implemented the Speccy's ULA with more colours, making modern microcontroller-based clones a distinct possibility.