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- Path: coranto.ucs.mun.ca!gnoel
- From: gnoel@morgan.ucs.mun.ca (George Noel)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.games,comp.sys.amiga.advocacy,comp.sys.amiga.misc
- Subject: NA Games magazines not covering Amiga titles as much
- Date: 26 Mar 1996 17:59:08 GMT
- Organization: Memorial University of Newfoundland
- Sender: gnoel@plato.ucs.mun.ca
- Message-ID: <4j9b9c$3d5@coranto.ucs.mun.ca>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: plato.ucs.mun.ca
- Summary: November issue of Computer Gaming World
- Keywords: Grey Market
-
- I got my hands on the November 1995 edition of Computer Gaming World
- which is a "Special Windows 95 Issue" and found that 95% of the magazine
- talked about PC games, 4% probably about MAC games (with most being PC
- games also) and less then one percent about Amiga games. What I found
- interesting though was a write in letter from one of their subscribers
- whom is an Amiga owner talking about Amiga games, Amiga aspects and Escom
- and how the magazine hardly ever talks about these games until they are
- on the PC and hardly talks about Amiga games at all.
-
- The following is the letter and the response.. (posted without permission)
-
- INTERFACE section (P. 18)
-
- AMIGA AMIGO
-
- In addition to owning an Amiga computer, I am a subscriber because I
- like to know what the IBM gaming world is doing. You guys make your
- living from computer games, but you don't seem to know what is going on
- outside of the IBM market. For example, in your September 1995 review of
- The Chaos Engine, the reviewer states, "Three years ago, this would have
- been a good Nintendo Cartridge..." The Chaos Engine is a port from the
- Amiga and it did come out two or three years ago. Serf City is another
- game your magazine reviewed and another port from the Amiga where it was
- released as The Settlers. I can understand you not wanting to review
- Amiga games, that is a smaller market and most of the best games are
- written for IBM-type machines these days. We do, however, still get some
- new games (mostly from Europe) and Escom, the company that bought the
- assets of Commodore, is making more Amigas and is working on new models
- of the Amiga. You could even mention that Sensible World Of Soccer is a
- very good sports game and available only on the Amiga and that Super
- Skidmarks 2 is a lot of fun to play, especially with two Amigas linked
- together. Just kidding, I know you would never do anything like that.
- You're too busy writing about your excitement with the convoluted,
- bloated monstrosity -- Windows '95.
-
- Judson Jones
- Arlington, VA
-
-
- Actually Judson, we're not biased against the Amiga, because half of our
- current staff used to own one. However we didn't cover the Amiga
- versions of The Chaos Engine and The Settlers because they were only
- brought into this country through the grey market. We certainly prefer
- to cover games which are available to our readers. But, while we're
- talking about other people who don't think their machines get a fair
- shake in our pages... (next letter is from a MAC owner).
-
- -----------
-
- Has their been any great attempt to inform these magazines in North
- America about the continuing Amiga game market and such recent great
- titles such as Alien Breed 3D II: The Killing Grounds and the original
- Alien Breed 3D etc. are out for it? I know the only place I have seen to
- get these recent good Amiga titles from Europe are mail order companies.
- Is there a North American Software Amiga distributor? If not, then can SMG
- handle the importing of Amiga games and apps from overseas and be the
- main distributor here in North America? The hardware might not be
- selling too much here but I am sure there continues to be Amiga faithfuls
- here who want all the latest software for the Amiga. Maybe this is
- something AT, Escom and Amazing Amiga (the only Amiga only magazine left
- in North America) can start looking into. Even Amazing Amiga hardly
- covers new games. The game industry is what attracts young kids to
- computers (along now with the WEB/Internet) and ranges up to the age of
- 30. But once in the home and the parents start finding out what kinds of
- software is available for the Amiga and that it is cheaper to do their
- taxes on, manage a database, use spreadsheets etc. then that could also
- open up that market. Heck afterall, how many parents started using the
- Nintendo more then their young ones in a lot of cases? :)
-
- -=*George*=-
-
- P.S. As a sidenote, AT/SMG should come up with a deal with Amazing Amiga
- Computing (PiM publications) to include the latest edition of their
- magazine with all new Amigas shipped in North America to give new users
- or people who upgraded a chance to subscribe to their magazine and to see
- what is out there in North America for the Amiga through mail order and
- other reviews and ads for Amiga products that might not be available to
- them locally. This could open up a great distribution range for the
- magazine also and probably sway more advertisers their way.. a win-win
- situation!
-
-