steem

Thursday, February 27, 2020

Amiga Power (June 1991)






Amiga Power (June 1991)





While there may not have been a great many Amiga specific magazines in the U.S. and no Amiga game specific magazines that I know of, there seemed to be plenty in the U.K. Amiga Power is one of those many and the June 1991 issue includes:
  • True Stories - All the news that's fit to print - from Ramparts to Rodland, from Beast Busters to Bonanza Bros. you'll find the true story in True Stories. Plus Crib Sheets. Oh dear..., and all your other regular 'favorites'...

  • The Charts - What's going up, what's coming down and what's hovering about in the middle somewhere - the 100 hottest games of the day, as voted for by you, the consumers, with your wallets.

  • Complete Control - The most reliable hints and tips in the business, here to give you Complete Control over your games. This month, level codes to Gem X and Brat, cheats for a whole bundle of older things and - yes! - the second (and concluding) massive six-page (six page!) final installment of Gary's Complete Guide to Rainbow Islands. If there's ever been a more comprehensive guide to any game printed anywhere, we'd like to see it!

  • Creation, 'Bob' and Populous II - The whole god-sim concept takes two giant steps forward, jumps to the side, and then heads off in three or four different directions at once. Peter Molyneux and the Bullfrog crew show us how...

  • If I'd Known Then... - Eric Matthews recovers from the (really quite mild) critical nitpicking Gods received last issue, dusts himself down, then tells us when he really things of the Bitmaps' old games...

  • The Bottom Line - Amiga Power's unique reference guide to every significant full price game released over the past year. Six pages packed to overflowing with Uppers, Downers and - yes! - the all important Bottom Line...

  • Do The Write Thing - Letters of praise, more letters of praise and - inevitable really - a few whinges from publishers still smarting from last month's critical drubbings. Reaction to the first issue was, erm, 'varied' to say the least...
...and more!

No comments:

Post a Comment