I was going to hit you all with a roughly two week stream of straight up Street Fighter, but then I saw the Nintendo Power announcement and felt the need to write something up sooner rather than later.
I have been playing video games for a long time. A loooong time, it seems. Still, when I got my first NES, it was as though a whole new world of video gaming adventures was being put in front of me. The kinds of games that came out had a depth to them that was missing in my games played before that. With my NES I got a subscription to Nintendo Power, which I kept active for a few years. The earliest issues were certainly my most memorable though.
With reviews, previews, maps, trick codes and more - this was the first magazine publication I had ever gotten and I simply could not get enough of it. I wound up getting other gaming magazine subscriptions over the year, like GamePro, Electronic Gaming Monthly and Game Informer, because I wound up owning more than just Nintendo systems, and they presented me with better rounded coverage.
Let's not forget the posters. I took great care in painstakingly extracting those posters and putting them up in the small room of my house I played video games in. Yes, they were cheesy a lot of the time, but I still hung them up.
Reading about how Nintendo Power has become the latest print casualty for gaming fans, I thought I would take a look back at a handful of my favorite Nintendo Power Magazines from years past.
Number 5 - The Batman issue
I went and saw Batman in the theater when it came out, and it was one of the more memorable movies from when I was younger. I absolutely loved it. Established properties like movies and television shows being turned into video games was not nearly the black eye it is nowadays. There was a lot of genuine excitement about the Batman game back then - and it turned out to be a fun game (though I recall it got very difficult near the end). That there was conversation about some of my other favorite games back then, like Double Dragon II and Tetris certainly helped as well.
Number 4 - The Super Mario Bros. 3 issue
I really do not recall any games prior to Mario 3 that got so much attention - both pre and post release. It was amazing stuff, and this issue only helped reinforce that marketing campaign for me. At the time I only had my Nintendo Entertainment System and TI 99/4a. Getting previews of games that were coming out was a lot of fun for me. Here are a couple of the old Mario 3 commercials in case you don't recall them:
Number 3 - The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles issue
I adored the Ninja Turtles when I was younger, and was one of the few people who actually seemed to like the original, super tough TMNT game for the NES. One of my favorite things about Nintendo Power were the detailed maps. I cannot recall every game I used them with - Metroid I believe had one, and I know I got some great mileage out of the TMNT one.
Number 2 - They called it the Zelda II issue
Later it was just called the Adventure's of Link, and very few people I knew referred to it as Zelda II. Nintendo did some pretty brave things with The Adventures of Link, taking the gameplay in some very different directions from the original. The video game reviews were hugely helpful, at least to a kid in the pre-internet age. Of course, one could argue that the reviews coming from Nintendo staff about Nintendo games was anything but impartial, but I still poured over every last one in detail, trying to figure out where my lawn mowing money was going.
Number 1 - Castlevania II: Simon's Quest issue
This one stood out for several reasons. While it was the second issue of Nintendo Power ever, it was actually the first one I had gotten with my subscription. The cover was amazingly creepy, and I had purchased Simon's Quest right about this time and found it both amazing - and frustratingly difficult where some of the puzzles were concerned. Nintendo Power walked me through those challenges, while introducing me to a new world of video gaming where I could keep track of games I did not even own.
Oh, and the discovery of 'game codes'. I had never heard of such a thing before. I rented (well, my dad rented) a lot of games for me as a kid, and one of the first things I did when getting a new game was to sift through my old issues to see if maybe there was a code, or walkthrough or review about the game that I might find interesting.
I admit - I spend a lot more time now reading up on gaming online. I still get Game Informer and still enjoy reading through it - but frankly magazines are just unable to keep up with the pace of online games. Why wait until the September issue of a magazine to read about Madden 13 when IGN will have it posted this Friday? That being said - I think Nintendo Power and similar magazines definitely helped to inform both gamers and casual observers alike over the years.
Did any of you subscribe to Nintendo Power? Did you like them, not like them? Would you have found them useful roughly twenty years ago before everything was on the internet, or no?














WOW those magazine covers look so old school hehe! Magazines can't keep up with the latest gaming news as fast as the internet can. I'm still subscribed to Game Informer too, just the cover of that magazine every month makes me drools!
ReplyDeleteI definitely like having a physical copy of a magazine still. They always ask me when I renew at Gamestop if I want digital or physical, but I ask for the mailed one. Still, I can't help but think it's only a matter of time until they stop offering it.
ReplyDeleteYeah, those covers... oldies there, believe me. But boy as a kid I looked forward to getting Nintendo Power in the mail.
Thanks for dropping by!
Games magazines really need to stop trying to be current - I think there is a future for games press in print, but I think it'll be more about features and analysis than news and current game reviews.
ReplyDeleteIt's just a matter of whether the publishers can move to that model instead, now.
The one when Super Street Fighter 2 was coming out was my fav. Odd though, I thought NP was done back in the 90s, lol
ReplyDeleteI had a subscription back in the 90s, and purchased a copy a few years back.
ReplyDeleteTheir big problem I think? Future Publishing. Having dealt with them directly on an issue, I should probably release the emails as it would shine some very interesting light on this subject right now, and probably one big reason why Future Publishing has failed to continue the magazine (though I have read its Nintendo and Future, both are at odds over contract and/or just difficulty working on the magazine together).
My main issue with Nintendo Power in general though, was lack of communication with readers. I contacted them a few times, and never received replies. If you're too busy for your readers, you're too busy.
Also, Nintendo Power tried to stick with just being a magazine basically, and had a very, very, very, very small online presence.
Something that I got from a subscription renewal with them might be popping up on Saturday though, if I can finish the post on time...
Agreed. Trying to report breaking news? Not as useful - but sometimes magazines can get great insight on upcoming games, and have some features that translate well whether it's grabbed today, or in a few weeks.
ReplyDeleteROFL - nope, they've been going a loooong time. But, I definitely don't see them on magazine racks like I have with EGM for example.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting - I never tried to contact them (well, I suppose I submitted some high scores via photo as a kid, lol) - but it sounds like you had an interesting conversation at one point. But I agree that a communication entity needs to... you know, communicate.
ReplyDeleteAnd I also agree that you see something like Game Informer which has embraced the web, is probably in a better spot to sustain itself currently.