GameFan


GameFan was a publication started by Tim Lindquist and Dave Halverson in September 1992 that provided coverage of domestic and import video games. It was notable for its extensive use of game screenshots in page design because of the lack of good screen shots in other U.S. publications at the time. The original magazine ceased publishing in December 2000. On April 2010, Halverson relaunched GameFan as a hybrid video game/film magazine. However, this relaunch was short-lived and suffered from many internal conflicts, advertising revenue being the main one.

History

The idea for the name GameFan came from the Japanese Sega magazine called Megafan. Although it began as an advertising supplement to sell imported video games mostly from Japan, the small text reviews and descriptions soon took on a life all their own, primarily due to the lack of refinement and sense of passion. Caricatures were given in place of actual editor profile, with profiles drawn exclusively by Terry Wolfinger. This particular method of reviewing and commenting seemingly freed its editors from the creative restraints commonly associated with competing publications. It also allowed certain editors like Dave Halverson to write multiple reviews of the same game under different pseudonyms.
GameFan was well known for its extensive import game coverage and its expansive coverage of the emerging interest in anime. Another major feature that separated GameFan from other gaming magazines was the high quality paper it was printed on. GameFan's game screen shots were the most colorful and faithfully resembled the game graphics. The death of GameFan is usually attributed to several factors. The primary cause was a series of lawsuits which had haunted the magazine for nearly its entire run, following it through numerous corporate iterations and change of hands. It is this lawsuit that, in fact, had prevented the sale of the print magazine and its continuation as a going concern.
Even after its demise, several staff members attempted to have the brand resurrected by the publisher of Computer Strategy Plus, based in Burlington, Vermont. A deal could not be reached and the magazine was shuttered shortly thereafter

Controversy

In the September 1995 issue of GameFan, an article was printed that contained several derogatory comments about Japanese people. The text took the place of one of the paragraphs of one of the sports games reviews. The article discussed a Namco flight-simulator, Ace Combat, rather than College Football '96 and was poorly written.
GameFan's official explanation was that a rogue employee had sabotaged the magazine in order to alienate its Japanese audience and fanbase. However, later reports indicated that it was actually filler text that someone had neglected to remove, and the whole thing was an internal joke that accidentally got printed. A long apology was published in DieHard GameFan's October 1995 issue in both English and Japanese, and a further apology appeared in the November 1995 issue.

Staff

Staff members of GameFan magazine had amusing aliases.
Within the magazine there was a comic strip, The Adventures of Monitaur, an anime-derived series. Although the title character Monitaur was only drawn for the strip, the rest of the magazine's staff personae appeared as characters. Monitaur's main storylines were his struggles against The Blowmeister, who metaphorically represented the leadership of rival magazines such as Electronic Gaming Monthly''.

Golden Megawards

The winners of GameFans annual Golden Megawards were chosen by editors.
AwardWinnerRunners-Up
Game of the YearGunstar Heroes Star Fox
Landstalker
Best Action Platform GameGunstar Heroes '
Best Action/AdventureAlien 3 Flashback
Best Fighting Game' Street Fighter II Turbo
Best ShooterSilpheed Star Fox
Best Action/Arcade GameBatman Returns Final Fight CD
Best Movie GameAladdin Alien 3
Best Cartoon Game' Taz-Mania
Best Puzzle GameMean Bean Machine Lost Vikings
Best SimulationAH-3 Thunderhawk MechWarrior
Best Strategy GameShining Force King Arthur's World
Best Action/RPGLandstalker Secret of Mana
Best RPG' Paladin's Quest
Best Driving GameCrash & Burn Formula One
Rock & Roll Racing
Best 2 Player GameDashin' Desperadoes Battletoads
Most Innovative New GameLandstalker
Tax-Mania
Best MusicLunar Star Fox
Gunstar Heroes
Sonic CD
Best New CharacterBubsy Aero
Sparkster
Best System of '93Sega GenesisSNES
Best HandheldGame Gear
Best New SystemAtari Jaguar3DO

AwardWinner
Game of the YearEarthworm Jim
Import Game of the YearClockwork Knight
Action/Platform Game of the YearEarthworm Jim
Action/Adventure Game of the YearMetroid
Action/Arcade Game of the Year'
Fighting Game of the YearSuper Street Fighter II Turbo
Shooting Game of the YearNovastorm
Movie Game of the YearDemolition Man
Cartoon Game of the YearMickey Mania
Simulation Game of the YearIron Soldier
Strategy Game of the YearShining Force 2
Role Playing Game of the YearFinal Fantasy III
Action/RPG Game of the YearIllusion of Gaia
Driving/Racing Game of the YearRoad Rash
Puzzle Game of the YearBubba 'n' Stix
Best Adventure/RPGSnatcher
Best 2 Player GameContra
Eternal Champions
Super Street Fighter II
Best SoundtrackEarthworm Jim
Best MusicFinal Fantasy III
Burning Soldier
Best Special Effects'
Donkey Kong Country
Guardian War
Best FMVLoadstar
Burning Soldier
Best New CharacterEarthworm Jim
Best New SystemSega 32X
Best System '94Panasonic 3DO

AwardWinnerImport Megawards
Game of the YearYoshi's Island
16-Bit Game of the YearYoshi's Island
32-Bit Game of the YearJumping Flash
SNES Game of the YearYoshi's Island
Genesis Game of the YearVectorman
PlayStation Game of the YearJumping Flash
Saturn Game of the YearVirtua Fighter 2
3DO Game of the YearD
Portable Game of the YearRed Alarm
Action Platform Game of the YearYoshi's Island Hermie Hopperhead
Action Adventure Game of the YearSkeleton Warriors
Fighting Game of the YearVirtua Fighter 2
Killer Instinct
Shooter of the YearPanzer Dragoon Darius Gaiden
Movie/Cartoon Port Game of the YearSkeleton Warriors
RPG of the YearEarthBound Mystic Ark
Action RPG of the YearBeyond Oasis Tenchi Sozo
Racing Game of the YearSega Rally Championship Motor Toon GP
Puzzle Game of the YearZoop Puyo Puyo Tsu
Simulation/Shooting Game of the YearWarhawk
Strategy Game of the Year' Tactics Ogre
Racing/Combat Games of the YearWipeout
Off-World Interceptor
Graphic Adventure/FMV Games of the YearMansion of Hidden Souls
Discworld
D
Special Effects Game of the YearWarhawk
Soundtrack of the YearSkeleton Warriors
New Character of the YearAstal

AwardWinnerRunners-Up
Top GameFan Game of 1996Tomb Raider
  1. Resident Evil
  2. Super Mario 64
  3. Nights
  4. Tekken 2
Best Import Game of the YearEnemy ZeroKeio Yu Gekitai
Coin-Op Game of the YearVirtua Fighter 3Street Fighter Alpha 2
16-Bit Game of the YearVirtua Fighter 2 Donkey Kong Country 3
Portable Game of the YearWario Red Alarm
Alternative Game of the YearNightsTail of the Sun
Side-Scrolling Game of the YearGuardian HeroesMetal Slug
Action/Platform Game of the YearCrash BandicootPandemonium
Action/Adventure Game of the YearTomb Raider Super Mario 64
Action/RPG Game of the YearThe Legend of Oasis'
Corridor Game of the YearPowerSlave Final Doom
Shooting Game of the YearPanzer Dragoon Zwei Virtua Cop 2
Fighting Game of the YearStreet Fighter Alpha 2Fighting Vipers
Racing Game of the YearRidge Racer Revolution, Wave Race 64Jet Moto, ', Formula 1
Racing/Combat Game of the YearWipeout XLMotor Toon GP, Wipeout
Puzzle Game of the YearTetris Attack Puzzle Fighter
RPG Game of the YearSuikodenSuper Mario RPG
Strategy Game of the YearReturn Fire Tecmo's Deception
Simulation Game of the YearGunGriffon Pilotwings 64
Best Sports Game of the YearWorldwide Soccer '97 Cool Boarders
Best Game Story of the YearSuikodenLegacy of Kain
Best Special Effects of the YearSuper Mario 64Tomb Raider
Best Soundtrack of the YearSuikodenTekken 2
Best Use of FMV/CG of the Year'Tekken 2Legacy of Kain''

Related publications

GameFan's original editor-in-chief, Dave Halverson, went on to publish Gamer's Republic, and then Play Magazine, consisting mostly of former GameFan and Gamer's Republic staff members. Gamer's Republic had a short run of 35 issues and has ceased publication back in July 2001 when the dot-com bubble burst. Play had a far more successful run of 97 issues until the publishing company filed for bankruptcy.
Tim Lindquist, along with several other members of the original GameFan team, began a new magazine, Hardcore Gamer. They also began developing strategy guides as a part of their publishing company, DoubleJump Books. The magazine had a short run of 36 issues before they began focusing exclusively on their website.
The DieHard GameFan name was resurrected by Alex Lucard as a website, , with Halverson's blessings. While there is plenty of coverage on the major releases, the site also prides itself on reviewing more "indie" games, much in the spirit of the original magazine.

2010 relaunch

After the bankruptcy of Fusion Publishing and the closure of Play, Dave Halverson immediately began work on his latest magazine, a relaunch of GameFan. The magazine returned to newsstands on April 2010, headed by Halverson and a few key staffers from Play with Rob Duenas serving as the new art director. It was available in both print and digital formats, the latter of which was sold directly through GameFan's online shop.
For the first two issues, GameFan featured a section titled MovieFan which covered movies, anime, and comics. The first two-thirds of the magazine were devoted to GameFan, then readers needed to turn the magazine upside down in order to read the MovieFan magazine. As of issue 3, the MovieFan portion of the magazine was discontinued, but later issues would still feature anime and comic reviews similar to Play. In its second and final issue, MovieFan conducted one of the last known interviews with late filmmaker, Satoshi Kon.
Up until issue 5, the magazine had been on a consistent, bi-monthly release schedule. Unfortunately, problems occurred with the magazine's development due to issues with advertising revenue, causing the sixth issue to be released on August 2011, eight months after issue 5, and with an entirely new editing team, headed-up by newcomer James Bacon. Issue 7 was assembled by only three people - Editor in Chief Dave Halverson, Art Director and Graphic Designer Rob Duenas, and Managing Editor James Bacon - and was released in December 2011. Soon thereafter Duenas resigned. The reason for his departure was due to an overwhelming workload stating that he worked "20 hours a day for two weeks straight and still short cover art". Despite the stressful working conditions, Duenas harbored no ill will towards Halverson or the magazine, stating that he would have still been willing to contribute with cover illustrations or providing assistance with layouts. Soon after Duenas' departure, Bacon left for reasons unstated.
A press release was issued on April 18, 2012, highlighting the supposed future of Paper Planet brands: GameFan and Girls of Gaming. The company planned on increasing their online presence through app development for mobile devices as well as a new GameFan TV online channel. None of these plans had ever come to fruition, with the slight exception of a YouTube channel. Former Destructoid editor Wesley Ruscher was named the magazine's new editor-in-chief but resigned shortly after the release of issue 8 stating that it "lacked the necessities to keep food in belly and a roof over head."
As of June 2013, GameFan's web presence had been in a mostly inactive state for about a year. Issue 9 was finally made available in February 2013 after missing their holiday 2012 release. This issue was only worked on by two people, Dave Halverson and Greg Orlando. Issues 8 and 9 were only available in a digital format. GameFan would later go on a two-year hiatus, returning in 2015 with a rebooted, redesigned magazine and website. In February 2015, GameFan simultaneously released issue 10 digitally and in newsstands. The digital version was released gratis on Magzter with the use of a promotional code. The magazine went through a complete overhaul, simplifying its layouts and design, most likely in order to have the magazines completed on schedule. The size of the print magazine is significantly smaller compared to previous issues. In addition to that, they also redesigned their logo and their mascot, Monitaur.
On May 6, 2015, GameFan had announced a partnership with Destructoid to help promote the GameFan brand with collaborations and free subscription offers. The initial plan was to bring back the dual-cover format from the first two issues, only instead of a MovieFan portion, it would be exclusive content created by Destructoid for the magazine. According to GameFan's official Facebook page, the deal with Destructoid would have allowed for the magazine to be released on a monthly schedule. However, the deal with Destructoid seemingly fell through as only one issue of the GameFan/Destructoid magazine had ever been released. As of January 2019, there have been no new updates regarding GameFan's overall status in more than three years.