24 Dec 2004, 01:36 AM
The GameFan history thread
Shidoshi
I've got a new wiki-powered section of my
website, and I'm working on the page for GameFan magazine. One of the pieces of
the history of GameFan I'm really sketchy on, though, is the part where Ziff
Davis game in. I've heard a few things - that Ziff tried to purchase the rights
to the name GameFan but failed, they purchased the rights but never used the
name, and that they even ran gamefan.com for a short time before putting it
down.
Could anybody clear things up concerning
the connection to GameFan that Ziff had?
(Last edited by BonusKun; 13 Jan 2005 at 10:01
AM)
===============
Shidoshi
Originally Posted by IronPlant
Shidoshi make sure to put a transcript of
that review where one of the eds goes crazy and writes nothing but racial slurs
against the Japanese.
Already planned on that.
This page is one of the things that
confuses me, specifically:
(http://gamegroup.ziffdavis.com/presscenter/biographies.html)
Sam was hired to relaunch GameFan.com,
where he managed to quadruple traffic in a matter of weeks. He then accepted a
News Editor Position at GameSpot; where he played a key role in raising the
site's traffic to record levels and helping formulate a massive relaunch
strategy.
Now, I'm not so familiar with the end-of-days
GFO crew, but I've never heard of Sam. As well, saying that he was in charge of
the "relaunch" of GameFan.com makes me wonder.
==================
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite
Matt, I heard rumors back in the day that
some GF editors caught shit because were selling review copies of games to
pirates. Any truth to that as far as you know?
From my said GameFan information page on my
new site:
GameFan found itself in a tight spot when a
pirated copy of the pre-release version of Resident Evil 2 was found by Capcom
at a local SoCal video game shop... a copy that contained information showing
it to have been copied from the preview release given to GameFan.
A member of the staff stupidly let the copy
of the game get into the hands a friend who was know for pirating games. What
would result would be pretty obvious to most people.
Quote Originally Posted by Integrity
When Sam left Gaming Age, his first "paying"
gig was for GFO, but he was there for just a couple of months before he left
for GameSpot. His "name" at GF was Captain Smak (it was during the
ECM era that he was writing for GFO, not after the magazine shut down).
As far as the supposed 'relaunch', GFO hit
a dead cycle for a period of time and when Sam came on board, started updating
way more frequent and thus worked miracles according to his bio.
Ah, gotcha. Thanks for clearing that up. I
didn't pay a whole lot of attention to GameFan.com after I stopped running it,
so I wasn't always up on who was part of it. I remember Hi-Fi, but that's
pretty much it.
===========
Shidoshi
When will your Gamefan page be finished?
Here is what I've got so far. It still
isn't finished, and things like the staff listing and links to stuff like the 'Jap
Bastards' incident haven't been touched yet.
http://bible.morningmayo.com/index.php/GameFan#History
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite
Well, that answers that. Thanks 'doshi. Were
there any repercussions from Capcom?
Being that I was just a lowely peon, I
didn't get the full story. I know that we had to seriously kiss their ass, and
I think we agreed to do some special projects for them in one way or another.
=========
djpubba
According to Ruebus, who worked for us at
DoubleJump briefly, the federal marshals actually showed up and searched the
place. This was long after I left (which was shortly before the move to Agoura
Hills).
===========
Shidoshi
You know, this might then connect to what I
thought was the IRS investigation. I know we showed up for work one day, the
place was locked down, and we were each given like two minutes to be escorted
in to retrieve any personal belongings. That would make sense.
==========
djpubba
The original magazine was handled by three
main people: Dave Halverson, Jay Puryear, and Guy Whose Name I've Forgotten.
The original was handled by Halverson, Greg
Off, Terry Wolfinger, George Weising, Kei Kubuki, Andrew Cockburn, Mas
something and Tim Lindquist (me). Jay mostly worked the counter at GameClub
until a little while later.
We printed the first issue (and the catalogs)
at my old place of employement, TV Fanfare in Valencia. Jay drove around to the
local newstands with the first issue in the back of his pickup truck and
basically gave it free to whoever would put it on the racks. By the 2nd issue
we had a deal with the people who distributed Low Rider magazine to distribute
us nationally -- in liquor stores across the country. We were on our way.
======
Shidoshi
See... this is why I love the internet.
Thanks for the info. I'm updating as we
speak.
======
cka
GameFan Network (surely this was seperate
from GameFan the magazine) was run by eFront, and eFront were a bunch of real
cheap pricks who rarely paid their hosted sites for advertisement hits. They
eventually closed up shop (WITHOUT PAYING US MIND YOU), and all the sites got
the shaft -- including my old prodigy fighters.net, somethingawful.com, and a
handful of PC gaming sites.
======
Shidoshi
If you (or others) can expand a bit on
GameFan Network, I'll put up a page for that as well.
======
cka
I explained pretty much all I remember
about them... We got a shitty server, they never paid us, and they folded after
only a few months because they couldn't afford to pay hosted sites for
advertising.
=====
MVS
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite
Matt, I heard rumors back in the day that
some GF editors caught shit because were selling review copies of games to
pirates.
I know what you are reffering to, but it
was this:
RE2 review copy came in.
Andrew Cockburn took it home and, no pun
intended, burned it.
2 days later it was brought to the
attention of he president of Capcom Japan that it was released in HK, a copy
was brought to him and he wasn't happy.
Federal Marshals raid GF office.
Took at least 2 years for Capcom to leave a
review copy of a game at GF, usually they were there waiting as it was played.
So, true it happened, not true it was
sanctioned or intended by GF.
The January 2001 Issue was finished and
burned onto CD, btw. I assumed Bruce had it, but he might not have taken it.
The 55,000,000 'investment' is shady as
well. Rumor has it that Dave Bergstein 'lost' 30,000,000+ of it and it's a
mystery to most why a hitman hasn't shown up on his doorstep.
There was also 2 different and yet unnamed
buyers for GF that were in negotian's to buy GF from around December 1st-15th (Shit
Birthday Luck again) and then on to about the end of the month.
=====
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by IronPlant
hmm, could one of you clear one thing up
for me? What were the politics behind the chat going pure java? I think I've
been told, but it was so long ago I have forgotten.
Boy, I don't know anything about that. The
biggest chatroom story I know was when Dan (Knightmare) went in there drunk one
night, and ended up getting temporarily fired for what he said the next day. *heh*
Oh, and: The "Jap Bastards" incident
http://bible.morningmayo.com/index.php/Jap_Bastards
====
djpubba
I do have the first two around somewhere,
and all the catalogs.
There's a nice list of all the issues with
cover pics here:
http://www.millartime.com/videogames/gamefan.htm
Edit: Whoops, it's gone now. You can still
get it here for now:
http://web.archive.org/web/20031216131108/http://millartime.com/videogames/gamefan.htm
======
COmpass
Interesting read, Shidoshi. I'd like to
hear about the post-Halverson GameFan. It seemed like everyone who didn't
accompany him to Gamers' Republic harbored a lot of resentment. There were
comics that made fun of him, lots of referrals to "the Mullet", etc. Why
was there so little respect? Was he a horrible boss, secretly hated by everyone
the whole time? Or were people just pissed 'cause they got left behind at
GameFan?
========
Shidoshi
Well... I've really calmed down about
Halverson, and I've talked to him on different occasions in recent years, and
we've been pretty cool with each other. So, I don't want to sit here and point
fingers and place blame and whatnot.
At the time of the split, it wasn't totally
those who were "left behind" - a number of people, including me,
decided to stay. I never felt like I got much of a chance under Dave's rule, I
felt he didn't like to so much, and I felt that I'd have far more opportunity
at GameFan once he was gone. Once he left, I had the chance to actually do reviews
of some of the games I wanted to, and I was able to do anything I wanted to do
with AnimeFan.
If you want to read about my past feelings
about Halverson, then hit this link. It's an archived page from Fatbabies that
came about when Halverson showed up on the GameGO message forum. As I said, I'm
over all of that now, and I'm sure he's quite a different person now as well.
http://www.fatbabies.com/story_sept-oct01.html - ZIP archive
[http://web.archive.org/web/20080513175002/http://www.fatbabies.com/story_sept-oct01.html]
==========
djpubba
Quote Originally Posted by Compass
Why was there so little respect? Was he a
horrible boss, secretly hated by everyone the whole time?
When I worked with him he seemed to me to
be the biggest bullshitting backstabber I'd ever had the bad luck to meet. If
he's changed, that's great, but from what I've heard from PR folks who I talk
to who have to deal with him still today, he treats them the same way.
==========
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Core Boy
Shidoshi, something doesn't synch-up with
the dates in that article. Was it the Sept'96 issue?, it doesn't seem like
Sept'99 is correct. ..just a heads-up.
Yeah, a moment of brain failure on my part.
It was 1995, not 1999. Thanks.
Quote Originally Posted by sedition
thanks for the link... looks like i'm
missing the catalogs 1-3 and the first two magazines.. along with the Street
Fighter Alpha 3 issue(which i saw in the store once and didn't buy, damn) and
the Soul Reaver issue. Also missing the last megafan.
My guess is that finding the catalogs would
be a hundred times harder than finding the first two issues of the mag. I think
I've only ever seen one of the catalogs once.
The Soul Reaver issue was one that I want
to say was featured at the E3 show of that year. Unfortunately, it was during a
particularly bad time for getting the mag printed, and it saw only very limited
release beyond that. My guess is that that issue is probably one of the hardest
to find.
==============
djpubba
Speaking of GameFan rarities, here's an
interesting one I found on an old Syquest disk. It's the media kit we made to
take to CES before the launch of the magazine. We couldn't afford to print it
so the only thing that even possibly exists besides the files is the film,
which probably got tossed in a move.
Here's a PDF of it.
GamefanMediakit.pdf
Some of the graphic links are missing so
they come out with white boxes around them. As bad as it is, it wasn't as THAT
bad. (Okay, the background on that masthead is that bad).
==========
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Compass
::does a double-take::
wait a sec, you almost got fired for having
dyed hair?
Yup. The argument was that I wasn't
presentable to the reps from game companies anymore.
Of course, I never was presented to reps in
the first place. Also, the entire office itself was never presentable to reps.
*heh*
Quote Originally Posted by djpubba
Speaking of GameFan rarities, here's an
interesting one I found on an old Syquest disk. It's the media kit we made to
take to CES before the launch of the magazine. We couldn't afford to print it
so the only thing that even possibly exists besides the files is the film,
which probably got tossed in a move.
Consider that stolen for later use. *heh*
Very interesting. If you have anything else
from the early days of GF, I'd love to see it.
============
djpubba
Who was your alter ego?
I did very little writing since I was too
busy doing the "real" work. ;-)
Especially in the beginning when George and
I were the only ones who knew how to type. The "writers" would all
stand around us at the computer and dictate their reviews as we typed them
directly into the layout.
The only stuff I ever wrote went under the
name "King Fausto". I did a few Viewpoints and a Streets of Rage
preview.
========
Fe 26
Dango is still around. I'm not sure what
company, but he does something in regards to putting out sports games. He is
the only orginal GF writer that still comes to GF_Tavern to talk.
=C he doesn't talk about VOOT much anymore.
============
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Klonoa
Whats that story about how the GF crew
weren't getting their paychecks for a long period of time and Halverson was
driving around in an Audi TT?
I don't know Dave's side of this: however,
here is the staff's side.
When I started, GameFan was under
Metropolis Media. What would happen is, as payday was day or two away, we would
call the bank to see if there was any money in the back to actually make the
paychecks worth something. It was pretty sad that we knew by heart the phone
number for the bank and the account number for Metropolis Media. Maybe twice a
year, on payday, the full amount to pay all of the employees was in there. The
most common even was that there would be about half of the required amount in
there. The morning of payday, we'd call to make sure that there was at least
something in there. The moment checks were handed out, everybody would run out
to their cars, and Cannonball Run style, race to the closest branch of that
bank to cash the checks. If you got there too late, you were out of luck. The
remainder of the money to cover the paychecks might come the next day, or it
might not come for a few days. I think once or twice, it even took a week or so
to get in there, if not longer.
There were times, though, that no money was
in there at all on payday, so everybody in the office simply had worthless
pieces of paper. We'd then have to just call every day to find out when we
could actually get some money.
==========
djpubba
Quote Originally Posted by djpubba
The "writers" would all stand
around us at the computer and dictate their reviews as we typed them directly
into the layout.
Quote Originally Posted by Brisco Bold
What? There's gotta be a story behind this...
Hmmm, story... well nobody there could type
worth a darn and for a while the only computers to type on were mine and
George's (I had a Mac IIx, my own computer which I brought in from home, and
they bought George a Mac IIci). So most articles would be hand written and
handed to us. The Viewpoint section was consistently dictated right into the
layout for many issues. Everyone would gather around me or George and just
brain dump. Several of the aliases were all Halverson -- Skid, Mr. Goo, E. Storm,
sometimes Sgt. Gamer -- probably one or two more I'm forgetting... more than a
few times the different Viewpoints on the same game would all be written by him.
I guess another interesting story would be
about how the GameClub GameFan catalogs got done. This was before I was in the
same physical location as everyone else (pre-magazine). Halverson would write
out the copy in pencil on pieces of paper. He'd cut screen shots out of
Japanese magazines and paper clip them to 3 x 5 cards with the names of the
games written on them. When it was all ready, I'd meet with him to get the
pile, which I took home to turn into a catalog. That's how all the DieHard
GameClub ads in EGM got done, too. I'd do 'em up then return with printouts for
approval.
Speaking of screen shots... we started off
with some really horrible composite video capture hardware. The quality of
shots in issue 1 was piss-poor, but I knew from my experience hacking the
Genesis and Neo Geo into arcade cabinets with RGB monitors that if I could find
a screen capture card with RGB input we'd be able to grab near pixel-perfect
shots and trounce EGM and the other mag's shot quality. So I dug through the
ads in the back of a bunch of Mac magazines and found what I was looking for --
the Computer Friends Colorsnap 32+, which advertised RGB inputs. So I told Dave
that it'd be so worthwhile to plunk down the extra dough to buy this card. He
was skeptical but agreed with some reservation. When the card arrived, it came
with a cable that just had BNC connectors, so I cannibalized the cable I had
made for the arcade monitor, mated the two, grabbed some shots and showed him
the difference. He was upset that I hadn't showed this to him sooner.
After I left GameFan and started Dimension
Publishing with Talko and Brody, Halverson sued Dimension when we came out with
a competing publication (PS-X, later PSExtreme) and part of the suit was that
we had stolen RGB screen capture technology owned by GameFan -- not any of
their hardware -- no, we stole the very concept of grabbing screen shots in RGB.
============
djpubba
Quote Originally Posted by Rumpy
E. Storm too? I thought he did the manual
for Weaponlord...and that he was a real person. Or am I thinking of someone
else?
E. Storm was definitely Halverson. The full
name was Ernest Storm, made from a combination of Ernest Evans and Alien Storm (or
Nova Storm, I forget which Storm game it was).
==========
djpubba
Quote Originally Posted by Jetman
And this just makes me want to vomit. Halverson
didnt win the law suit did he?
It was settled out of court and I believe
there was an NDA clause I signed preventing me from disclosing the details of
the settlement.
However I can talk about the stuff which
anyone we were talking to at the time would have heard. There was more than
just the RGB screen shot issue. From what I understood from being around while
this was happening, there was a contract between GameFan and Talko that had two
parts. Part one was that Talko would continue to write for GameFan after he
left (the sports section) and they would pay him an agreed upon amount for his
work. Part two was that he wouldn't compete with GameFan. Well, it wasn't long
before Talko said he wasn't getting paid for his work so he considered the
contract broken and he was free to compete with GameFan. So we made PS-X. GameFan
sued him and there was a settlement, the details of which I cannot speak. As
anyone can see, however, Dimension continued producing PS-X (renamed PSExtreme
because of a threatened suit from Ziff Davis) and we merrily continued grabbing
screen shots in RGB. :-)
Quote Originally Posted by Melf
Wasn't Halverson also the Postmeister?
Yes, most of the time, but I recall that
different people would write the Posty replies, depending on who knew the best
answer. So Postmeister wasn't just one person. And yes, there were occasionally
times when both the questions and answers were written by the Postmeister. But
in fairness, that didn't happen at GameFan as much as at some *other*, *cough*,
magazines I worked on.
=============
bahn
Quote Originally Posted by Melf
Wasn't Halverson also the Postmeister?
Actually, most of the team took turns -- not
sure if he ever stepped up to that duty. But as it turns out, Hi-Fi ended up
playing the role the longest from what he told me sometime ago.
================
djpubba
I only speak of the time I was there, of
course, which was full time from before issue 1 until about the 12th issue,
plus I worked on 4-5 issues after that on a freelance basis, part time, but on
site.
===========
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by x2y
They even made Macross VFX look good too
bad it was a turd.
Hey, at least I trashed it in my review.
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite
As for Shidoshi, I remember your review of
Real Bout: Fatal Fury and how you went on and on about the "Blue Mary
Blues" extra you got when you beat the game (I think you called it "the
greatest extra in the history of fighting games"). Good review.
Haha, yeah. I wasn't the biggest Real Bout
fan in the world, but at that point, I was far and away the biggest NeoGeo fan
that was at the mag. Anything that I could do to get more coverage for the Neo,
I did.
And actually, Blue Mary made a cameo in one
way or another in most of the game reviews that I did.
==========
Adol
E. Storm on McDonald's Treasure Land
Adventure:
"Believe me, this is an exceptional
game. In fact, it's so good that witin minutes you'll forget all about Ronald
because you'll be having fun, playing a great and original acion/platform that
is ful of great play mechanics, colorful, detailed graphics and beyond 16bit
special effects." GameFan Vol. 1 #12.
===========
Shidoshi
A few more quick stories from the days of
GameFan...
Bergstein (the guy in charge of Metropolis)
had this small army of guys who did his bidding - problem solvers, basically,
no matter how big or small the problem. They were all of the same certain
ethnicity, Middle Eastern or something like that. The lead guy - Musha, Misha,
Moesha, some name like that - had supposedly made sure more than a handful of
guys were never seen or heard from again back in his home country.
Jody Setzer was a nice guy, but I had a
stupid situation with him one time. He asked me if I wanted to help on the
Puzzle Fighter guide (the pocket one that was given away at Kay-Bee), and I
said sure, because I was a big fan of the game. He then took that to mean that
I wanted to DO the strategy guide, and expected me to get started on it. I had
never done a strategy guide in my life, and at that point, I had little
grabbing experience and zero layout experience. I tried to tell him that I
couldn't just "do" a strategy guide without at least some suggestion
on how one makes one, and he got pissed about that. The project was given to a
few of the other guys, but I still helped out on it.
Most of the foreign writers started working
at GameFan totally illegally. They would come over on a visitor's Visa, work at
the office, and once their three month vacation Visa was up, they would fly
back to their country and stay there a bit until they could come back on
another visitor's Visa.
THQ came by when they were trying to pimp
their PSX fighter Vs. The semi-Asian girl with pink and black hair in the game
was based on a real girl that one of the lead developers had a hard-on for. (It
might have been his girlfriend, but I don't think so.) So THQ brought her along
one day, and we sat down with her to play the game. Most of the guys were just
goofing around, not really playing seriously, and letting her win. I wasn't
such a gentleman, and kicked her ass in the game. Suddly, the THQ PR chick
pulls out this Sony discman with a huge "Vs." sticker on it, and
proclaims me the winner of the Vs. "tournament." We, of course, had
no idea we were in some sort of tournament. The THQ PR woman was a TOTAL
hottie, so even though their games sucked ass back then, I loved it when they
stopped by.
I was in charge of reviewing Ten Pin Alley,
a bowling game (and actually, a pretty good one) for the PSX. One of the guys
who worked at the company releasing it, ASC Games, tried to convince me to
convince Dave to put Ten Pin Alley on the cover of GameFan. He even offered to
name one of the characters in the game after me if I could talk him into it.
I'll post more later.
==============
djpubba
Quote Originally Posted by Ex Ranza
Halverson had me totally convinced of
Cybermorph's greatness, I'll tell you that much.
Then I got a Jag, took it home, and
something seemed... not right.
Oh, there's a doosy of a story behind that
one. I shit you not, but Halverson was high on acid when he wrote the
Cybermorph article, along with half the staff. We had just pulled a couple of
all-nighters in a row, which was the norm at deadline times. Apparently, when
The Enquirer came back to work the next morning, he dropped some acid in the
coffee pot, which most of the crew, including Halverson, drank from. I wasn't a
coffee drinker at the time so I didn't really notice anything unusual and
didn't learn what was going on until George started threatening to murder
Cockburn.
So, re-read that Cybermorph article now
that you know he was on acid, and it'll shed new light on just why he thought
it was such a great game.
========
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Klonoa
I think Halverson posted on TNL once to
straighten some things out (in a thread about Halverson, not surprisingly)
Either it really happened or, all this
Halverson talk got me imagining things.
Actually, to correct this, Dave stopped by
the GameGO forum to plug the introduction of Play - he wasn't there because of
any talk about him. He posted, I went nuts on him, and things snowballed from
there. (That was a pretty interesting thread, actually, because a lot of the
old GF crew ended up stopping by to say something.)
And the "acid in the coffee" story
was still a pretty popular story when I was working there.
=======
djpubba
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite
I'd like to give a shout out to Shidoshi
and djpubba for what they've contributed to this thread. Gamefan was my all-time
favorite gaming mag. As has been pointed out, it wasn't the best or most
professionally written, but it had 10,000x the personality of any other mag. I
enjoyed reading it so much I even read the sports game articles, and I couldn't
give a shit about sports games.
I hear that. Even though I don't have good
things to say about Halverson's people skills, he was and still is dedicated to
what he does and some great magazines came out of what he does. I take pride in
the part I played in making GameFan. It was definitely the most interesting
time of my life and there was a lot of good fun mixed into the nightmare. :-D
============
rezo
Quote Originally Posted by Ex Ranza
December '93. I've been looking for a
transcript or something on the web since my original copies are long gone, but
to no avail. Man.. that was over 10 years ago.. I feel old..
It was posted here before, <b>during
an older version of this topic</b>. However, when I looked for it, all
that I found was diffusionx asking for it over a year ago and mentioning that
he knew it was posted here before but couldn't find it, so I guess it was
posted on one of the older versions of the board. =\
==========
djpubba
Okay, another story. One day, we were
sitting around, minding our own business, making a magazine, and the police
showed up wanting to speak with Andrew Cockburn's boss. They wanted to see if
this kid they had with them was a good hard working honest citizen, or just
some drugged out acid dropping nutjob. So, of course, Halverson told them what
a good kid he was... hard working, all that, yadda, yadda. So the police say,
allegedly, The Enquirer was making a right turn, but was watching for traffic
coming from the left, saw none, and went... right into a female jogger. Well,
since Dave vouched for him, they told the jogger she should have known better
and Andrew did no wrong since he had no reason to look right when traffic comes
from the left, and let him go.
I'm not sure if this was before or after
the authorities came looking for Andrew for obtaining a fake ID under the name "Guile"
from Street Fighter 2, and had used it to get a passport and went to Japan on
it, but I'm pretty sure it was before spiking the company coffee pot with lsd.
=============
djpubba
Okay, and then there was Kei (Special K). Kei
was Japanese. He was the one who translated all the Japanese games and
magazines for Dave and co. so they knew what the hell all the little jap
bastards were talking about. Dave had a dog. He had two dogs, actually. One was
a pug named Puggle and the other was a small white furball named Snowball. Both
male. Both spent a lot of time at the offices. Puggle was dumb as stump and
thought Snowball was a female and would routinely test that theory. Kei thought
this was the best thing ever and would show how he was not afraid to manually
take care of Puggle's needs, right in front of whoever was around to see. Kei
also confided to whoever happened to be listening that he was not jealous of
American men. He explained that American men may have large penises, but they
were not able to have very stiff erections because of that. He went on to say
that Japanese men had small penises, but enjoyed the luxury of VERY hard
erections (illustrated with a shaken fist in the air, arm bent at the elbow). I
wasn't sure at the time, but now that I've met more Japanese natives, I'm
relieved to find that these aren't just normal Japanese social behaviors and
Kei was a little off base. I don't think he was gay.
Still, Kei was a pretty nice guy and we
were friends. We actually printed one or two of his Japanese sections in PS-X. It
was sort of a magazine within a magazine, called "Impact Magazine."
=============
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by djpubba
I'm not sure if this was before or after
the authorities came looking for Andrew for obtaining a fake ID under the name "Guile"
from Street Fighter 2, and had used it to get a passport and went to Japan on
it, but I'm pretty sure it was before spiking the company coffee pot with lsd.
That's so great. RESPECT!!!
I only met Kei a few times myself, but I
knew of the dog thing, and of the running joke of imitating him with this, "Hey
doooooood!"
Quote Originally Posted by IronPlant
Didn't you have some werid thing for her,
and the knight girl from SS? I recall there being fanshrines and some other
nonsense on your webpage back in the day.
Hell yeah... Mary and Charlotte, the girl
from SS.
==========
Shidoshi
Another few quick ones... not terribly
exciting, but still fun.
One time the Capcom reps were at the
offices, showing us Megaman Legends, and they were giving Nick crap about his
SF EX review. In the layout, Nick had taken the character art for Skullo, I think
it was, and Sakura, and had positioned them on the page so that it looked like
Skullo was copping a feel on Sakura.
Also, if anybody is familiar with the
Japanese movie version of Weather Woman, I took a screenshot of what was
basically the US video cover (the main character pulling up her skirt to flash
her panties, which looked like nothing more than a swimsuit or something) and
included it in with the other screenshots for my review. The next day, I got a
call from GF HQ saying that I was in big trouble for trying to put porn into
the mag.
==========
Shidoshi
Who was MVS?
Kodomo. The guy with the soccer ball. I
can't remember if he was technically "last generation" or next to
last.
========
djpubba
I don't believe that's the right Cybermorph
article. The acid one was more pages. I do, however, love how he calls the
layout artist (which was probably Jacob Riskin or George Weising at the time), "my
trusty Quadra operator". What an assface.
========
djpubba
"...filled with vivid, brilliant
colors and detailed polygon enemies, that seem aware of my presence..."
That sounds like the acid talking to me. Enemies
that are aware of your presence? Uh yes, Dave, they've had that in games for a
while.
And besides, there's no doubt that it was
true. I was *there* when it happened.
============
kdeselms
Nick pointed this thread out to me on my
blog's message board and so I wrote a long-ass post about GameFan Online during
my tenure. I won't waste the bandwidth here to reprint it but go here if you
want to read it. I think Sam taking sole credit for quadrupling traffic is a
bit self-serving, but he did have a huge hand in getting the site turned back
around. I know that during my time, Shidoshi was off-site and doing his
AnimeFan stuff independently, so may not have as much perspective on that
period of time, which happened to be the site's most prolific, traffic-wise.
Kevin Deselms
========
ZIP archive of the above described forum page, as taken from Wayback.
========
KEVIN DESELM'S POST FROM EVILNET, JANUARY 2005:
Okay, be prepared...this is a long one.
It's so funny to me that years and years
after the magazine's demise, people are still talking about GameFan. I think
that magazine probably had the most loyal following in the industry. I came in
after the departure of Halverson, when Jay Puryear was acting as publisher. Jody
Seltzer, who was part of GameFan from very early and was basically responsible
for GameFan Books, was a good friend of mine from back in the day. He hired me
to be his assistant manager at a game shop in Colorado called "Power Play
Games"? This was circa 1991, during the height of the 16-bit era. I used
to hang out at the store and B.S. with him, we got to be chummy and when the
owner came in and I was there, chatting with customers and recommending stuff (actually
waiting for him to deliver Final Fantasy 2), he told Jody to get an application
from me, so they could unload their current assistant manager and hire me in
his place. I worked there for around a year or so, I guess. Jody and Lew (the
owner) ended up moving to California to hook up with Diehard Gameclub when
Lew's Power Play business started going south. They were hoping to start up a
Gameclub franchise, I believe. Anyway, Jody and Halverson hit it off, while Lew
apparently clashed with him. So Jody worked for GameFan until Imagine offered
him a job (presumably to head up a books department, since he'd run GameFan
books with a great deal of success). Things didn't happen for him there, so he
ended up coming back to GameFan again when Jay took over.
The details of how I wound up at GameFan
have been covered early in my columns on the VideoWrestling site - but while I
was there, things were fairly fun. I was one of two people (Sam Kennedy being
the other) hired to beef up the website. Since my focus had become television
and video editing, I felt I had knowledge and ability beyond that which was
being shown by other game sites in their video offerings. So I decided to give
our site a different draw, by cutting promos for every major game we previewed
and reviewed. Sam Kennedy was brought in at the same time, because he had
earned a reputation as a news hound and also had a very solid and communicative
Japanese contact who provided quite a few good scoops. We thought that since he
was getting news all day, and we were basically writing all day, we'd buck the
trend of all the sites updating at 6pm and go all day long, whenever something
was ready. This ended up working against us a lot of times, because we'd scoop
something and then the competition would snap it up and use it as their own. But
between Sam's news and my video contributions and of course, review and preview
writing by all three of us (Brandon Justice was the existing online writer),
our traffic increased fairly rapidly. I don't know whether it's Sam taking
credit for quadrupling traffic in his first few months or whether someone else
wrote that, but it certainly wasn't his news alone that accomplished this. We
easily quadrupled the amount of worthwhile content that was being published
exclusively on GameFan.Com and that was entirely a team effort, among the three
of us. I had Thomas feeding me European exclusives that angered the Euro sites,
because of his huge array of Euro contacts, so we weren't just limited to
Japanese import news. This is not to belittle Sam's contributions in any way at
all, he scooped a lot of people with news...but our videos were also gaining a
ton of notoriety among fans as well as PR people. In fact, we were allowed to
publish videos of games other sites weren't, simply by virtue of the fact that
I was making crappy games look good. I remember Eidos actually REQUESTING that
I take an alpha of one of their games, which had almost no enemies in it, and
do a video making it look like a winner. I forget what it was - some third
person action game - but after I did it, we got the video exclusive on quite a
few games after that, from them.
Anyway, Sam was with GameFan.Com for a very
short while - maybe a couple-three months. I was named the managing editor of
the site and I think both he and Brandon resented that fact - even though I was
the one doing the copy-editing, writing a ton of the content, the Postmeister,
and spending 4-5 hours digitizing gameplay and cutting videos for the site. It
wasn't without merit that I was placed in that position. So Sam took his
opportunity at Ziff (I don't blame him one bit and he's done spectacularly well
there for himself) and shortly thereafter (actually, right before E3), Brandon
bailed for IGN. I was the sole GameFan.Com staff member for that year's E3 - we
were in a little 10' by 10' cubicle in Kentia Hall and I sat there all three
days, never leaving but for the last two hours of the third day. I organized
all of the magazine writers into shifts, assigned them companies to cover, and
throughout the show they'd come in and file reports and give us CD's with shots
and movies. The IT guy would process the shots with our watermark, I'd copy
edit every article and post it, along with the shots. We had record traffic
during that show and afterward, we started hiring new people for the site. Anthony
(Dangohead) was moved over first, as my main help - God bless him. I also got
some help from Jason (Fury). Eric was ecstatic to land Levi from Nintendo Power
(actually, he was always thrilled at the opportunity to hire people away from
other pubs) - and Levi proved to be my right hand from the beginning. The guy's
a great, witty writer and a fairly fun presence in the workplace - if you're
not easily embarrassed. We put out a call for writers on the site, and Rick
came in for an interview. I talked to him for a while and liked him, he seemed
like an easygoing guy and would be a good fit, even though he hadn't had a ton
of writing experience yet. He definitely loved games and he had a unique taste -
which of course I ribbed him about constantly. But it's important to have
diversity on your review staff. Matt Van Stone came in and interviewed, at this
point we were looking for someone who knew Japanese and loved games, but the
Japanese knowledge was really important with the gap that Sam left. We at least
needed someone who could read the Japanese magazines and sites, as well as
import games. Matt had a good grasp of the language and a decent background in
games, so we hired him, too. We were pursuing a redesign of the site that
compartmentalized each platform; the concept was to put one guy in charge of
each section, and have one person to help them. Levi would head up the Nintendo
section (naturally) and Rick would help him, since he loved Nintendo too. We
needed people to run the PlayStation and Dreamcast sections, though. Again,
relishing the chance to steal talent, ECM grabbed Fernando Mosquera (then at
Gamer's Republic after folding his SegaNet site into their property) to run the
Dreamcast site, and Jay Boor (then at IGN PSX) to head up the PlayStation
section. At this point, we had what I felt was a really, really good staff and
our traffic really started to take off. I was able to focus less on writing and
more on videos (still doing the copy editing and Postmeister, as well as trying
to direct traffic among all the different writers), and traffic started to
climb pretty steadily.
You have to understand that when I started
at GameFan, the website was only getting around 6-7,000 unique visitors a day (around
the time when Shidoshi and then Brandon were running it, more or less alone). When
Sam and Brandon left, we were getting around 20-25,000 uniques. With the crew I
described above, we got up to about 40,000 unique visitors per day - and that's
when we decided to branch out into the PC games world. We approached Robert (Apache)
who had been running the most popular Unreal website on the net, about starting
his own PC site as a subsection of GameFan.Com (under the final redesign) and
he liked the idea of competing with the likes of Voodoo Extreme and Blues News.
So he came on board, and we hired one person to help him out - a well-known PC
hardware reviewer whose name I can't remember - I think it was another Matt. Those
two worked fairly independently of the rest of us - it was a little weird,
actually. They were in a separate room (with Fernando) and sort of pursued it
like they were running an entirely different site - although most of the
content still filtered through me as the copy editor. With their help, we
boosted traffic to over 55,000 unique visitors per day. Things were looking
bright - until Bergstein got greedy. He then did that deal, essentially conning
Eidos - our closest ally in the advertising sense - out of around 55 million
dollars and using that as incentive for DVD Express to buy us. (Word has it he
made out with a giant chunk of that money in some contractual wrangling and
actually bought Express after bankruptcy, briefly turning it into DVD.Com
before it also tanked.) DVD Express was looking to IPO this giant 'all in one'?
retail and content supersite - cashing in on the big Internet boom. They'd
already hired a ton of talent for the entertainment and music areas, being led
by the most annoying woman on the face of the planet, Allison - who hailed from
Variety magazine and who insisted on using that vernacular in her e-mails...much
to my great irritation. Anyway, unfortunately for Express, they were doing this
right on top of the online advertising bubble - and it burst shortly after we
moved into their offices in Hollywood. They sold me on the idea of doing a
video production department that I would head up, providing video content not
only for video games but also 'behind the scenes'? packages for films and music
on their other entertainment sites. So I turned the reigns of GameFan.Com over
to Levi in anticipation of this video thing - which never materialized.
They had also started the GameFan network
with Apache's help, since that seemed like 'the thing to do'? at the time - boosting
ad revenue through sheer traffic numbers. They overextended themselves
financially by making the most attractive offers to the biggest fansites, to
lure them away from competing networks - but then the bubble burst and there
was no money to be had. So they couldn't pay off the fansites for the ads they
ran, and the thing collapsed under its own weight. This was the beginning of
the end of GameFan.Com - and shortly thereafter, the magazine. This giant
behemoth of Express.Com just crushed itself while madly scrambling toward an
IPO that kept slipping further and further away - while the pressures on us to
deliver unreasonable results mounted. Plus we were now being supervised by an
ex-Variety writer who knew a sum total of jack and shit about running a gaming
website. Our staff was slowly decimated and workloads increased, eventually
only Levi and Rick were left for the final few weeks, writing product
descriptions for Express.Com and keeping the shell of GameFan.Com alive. But it
was over.
Before Express.Com came along, GameFan was
actually a pretty fun job...even if I was constantly annoyed by ECM's
interference with the site, as I was proud of the fact that we maintained a
different tone than the magazine...at one point, even "unmasking" ourselves,
KISS-style and abandoning the nicknames. If we were ever combative or caustic,
it was his influence on editorial - particularly in picking fights with other
sites. However, I did have numerous unfriendly e-mail encounters with IGN's
Doug Perry, who always came across as if he were the 'Big Brother'? looking
down his nose at us. At the time, I'm sure it really rubbed him the wrong way
that Jay had jumped ship for GameFan.Com but Jay did it out of practical
reasons, not disloyalty - he wanted to live in Los Angeles and continue writing
about games. However, I also feel that many of the 'supersites'? were starting
to feel a little threatened by the steam we were gaining at the time. If things
had continued the way they were before Express took us over, I think the
chances are good GameFan.Com would have been near the top of the heap. But I am
thankful things went the way they did, because it put me on my current path - and
this is really the direction I intended to head, when I took the job and moved
out here. It's just that you sometimes get comfortable and it's easy to get
complacent when the money is as good as it was, back then.
As for stories about GameFan, I'm sure
Levi, Rick and I could tell quite a few, both good and bad. I had a good time,
for the most part - it was fun taking Posty into a direction that was one of
the most popular and recognizable in GF history, with readers copying his catchphrases
in their letters and using them on message boards. I also think I was one of
the longest-running Posty writers in the magazine's history. I also took a lot
of pride in the video aspect of the site. It's disappointing to note that no
websites have picked up that torch and carried it - because I still feel that a
1-2 minute promo-style video with choice gameplay moments is far better than a
minute or two of random gameplay by unskilled players. But this is coming from
the guy who cut in two frames of a dog crapping on the game box in his
Hresvelgr video. [Wink]
UPDATE - GameFan/GFO Alumni "Where Are
They Now," to the best of my knowledge:
Me (Hi-Fi / Postmeister / Occasional
magazine ghost writer) - Editing and Assistant Editing on various television,
DVD and feature projects. Check my resume for show names.
Levi Buchanan (Angus / occasional magazine
ghost writer) - Prolific freelance writer, still in the game industry. Semi-regular
poster here.
Rick Mears (The Wanderer) - Full-time
Nintendo shill - West Coast sales rep. Irregular poster here.
Jason Weitzner (Fury) - Currently a P.A. for
Big Bug Man, an upcoming animated film starring the voice talents of Brendan
Fraser and the recently deceased Marlon Brando. Frequent lurker here and one of
my buddies, even though ever since I moved away from Woodland Hills (and got
married), we don't see each other as much.
Thomas Puha (Riot) - Probably the most
successful of GFO alumni in the game industry, certainly the most prolific - publishing
his own magazine, producing television shows and generally doMinating Finland's
game scene...next step, European conquest. His magazine's website. Semi-regular
poster here, one of my oldest friends from back in the day.
Mike Wakamatsu (Waka) - PC game player and
full-time layabout. I think he's been unemployed longer than anyone I've ever
known and it's probably the biggest travesty there is, because he's a talented
graphic designer and some of the most memorable page layouts in GameFan were
his work. Posts here once in a great while, but we stay in touch and hang out
now and then.
Anthony Chau (Dangohead) - PR honcho at
Visual Concepts / Sega Sports. Pops his head out once in a great while to say
hello.
Robert Howarth (Apache) - Longstanding site
runner of VE3D.com, aka "Voodoo Extreme." Stays busy with his site,
but also pops his head out to say hello, now and then.
I've lost touch with:
Eric Mylonas (ECM) - Had a falling out with
him, our personalities always clashed somewhat and so I don't know what he's up
to, now.
Jay Boor (Doctor J) - Last time I saw him,
he'd moved to England to be with his new wife, and was working at Codemasters
in PR. Now he's back in the States doing PR for a mobile phone company - thanks
to Rick for the update.
Fernando Mosquera (Lagi) - I think he may
have gone back to Argentina to pursue more school, he hasn't been seen in the
game industry since the collapse of GameFan.
Eric Patterson (Shidoshi) - Not sure what
he's up to, others will know better than I. Likely still a significant presence
in the online games and anime community.
Brandon Justice (Big Bubba) - When last I
spoke to him, he was also working for Visual Concepts / Sega Sports, in product
development (in some capacity). His dream job, to be sure. Now at Tiburon
working on the future of Madden football - thanks for the update, Thomas.
Sam Kennedy (Captain Smak) - Now heading up
1up.com - heard from him a while back and things seem to be going pretty well
for the site, so far.
Geoff Higgins (The Judge, El Nino) - He was
doing QA/support for an online MMORPG, the last I heard - but I don't know if
that's still the case.
George Ngo (Eggo) - He went from being PR
at Tecmo to doing testing for Activision, I believe it is...from what I've
heard, he's still there, heading up a test group.
Jeremy Corby (Core) - I haven't heard from
him in ages, though Jason said he'd run into him a while back...the guy's
probably doing porno or something right now. Funny guy, very extreme
personality.
Kim Tran - Another talented layout
designer, but I haven't heard anything about his whereabouts or projects at all.
I know he'd been thinking about graphic design school, don't know if he pursued
it though.
Tyrone Rodriguez (Cerberus) - There for a
while I was seeing his stuff on an IGN website, related to the import auto
scene...I know he'd been writing for an import cars mag for a while. But now I
don't know what he's doing or where he's at.
Bruce (Reubus) - No idea what he's up to
now, I haven't heard anything since GameFan went down.
=============
KEVIN DESELMS'S POST FROM EVILNET, JANUARY 2005:
To be honest, as the site's copy-editor for
the longest time, I was in a constant battle with grammar...Rick was not the
sole offender, by any stretch of the imagination. Anthony wrote some of the
most head-scratchingly confusing phrases I've ever read...and Boor's stuff was
usually a challenge, too. I was thankful when we actually hired a real copy-editor,
but then Eric liked the idea of having a copy-edited magazine so much that our
help got co-opted and his workload went through the roof. Naturally, we got
short-shrift.
Which was actually fairly common, since
Eric would occasionally refuse to let us use something WE got, if he could
appropriate it for the magazine as an exclusive. So we were often being
crippled by our association with the magazine...which only served to make Levi
and I both strive to separate ourselves from the magazine even more. We
eventually became our own machine, arranging our own visits from PR people, our
own interviews, our own...everything, basically. I think, with several PR
people, we had a better reputation in the way we handled ourselves with them. I'd
already become friendly with many of the PR people through my work in
television, so those relationships carried over...but everyone else we brought
in from other publications had their own built-in relationships too. So that
really helped us a lot, I think. There was still sharing going on between the
site and the mag, there wasn't "bad blood" or anything like that - but
we were in a separate part of the office and had our own infrastructure in
place. To be perfectly honest, too...the magazine staff often came back to
visit our area, because we always had a good energy and a lot of cool stuff
happening there. The most frequent visitors were Jason and Waka, I imagine...but
George and Geoff came back quite a bit too. I think the only person that I
never really saw leave his desk was Kim.
========
KEVIN DESELMS'S POST FROM EVILNET, JANUARY 2005:
posted January 04, 2005 02:57 PM
I remember that day Jay brought his woman
and left her in the car...there was also the time that we found her, curled up
under his desk crying...everybody was like, "WTF?" That was a
troubled relationship, for sure.
The people on that TNL forum have been
eating up all those old GameFan stories, and Tim hasn't even scratched the
surface. We could talk about Higgins and Levi, upping the ante on each other
with their streaking habits...
I thought the photos were funny though, the
one with Jody at CES cracked me up. He was looking quite wankerish there. That
was actually pretty shortly after he and Melissa moved out here, I think.
I told Tim that Waka's not doing anything,
so if they need a layout guy they should talk to him [Wink] Hehe...don't know
if you'd want to do that dude, but it's not like you have a lot going on! I
said if he wanted some videos or something, I might be willing to help out. Thomas
talked to me about that too, recently. I like doing game promos, they're pretty
fun and easy to be creative with. Don't know how much I'd be able to do, I'm
going to start cutting a documentary pretty soon - it's called "Gamers"
but it's about the "gaming" community, not video games. It's about
stuff like Warhammer, pen & paper type role-playing, live-action role-playing,
and nerdy stuff like that...but showing the social aspect of it as well. I
thought it sounded interesting. [Smile]
You know what would be awesome Waka? If you
could get all the "busted" E3 photos you did for the mag together and
post them...the one you did of Jason the monkey boy cracked me up, big time. Or
the high-forehead mutants at the entrance...
================
RICK MEARS POST FROM EVILNET AROUND THE
SAME TIME:
Memories...
As mentioned above I came in during the
tail end of the GameFan legacy, but the time I did spend with Kevin, Levi,
Anthony and crew was, by far, the best work experience I have ever had. Sure,
some days were better than others - but the fun and friendship we all shared
can never be replaced.
Except for the time you guys sent me to
that English class with all those immigrants... F you and your families too Ok,
so my writing skills weren't always up to par but jebus was I humiliated! I
remember almost packing up the family that weekend and moving back up north. Crazy
times.
My favorite GF.com moment - Completely fing
up Express.com's product info pages. Who knew that typing "yeah, safety
glasses" into a transformer toys product description could be so much fun.
I felt really guilty at the time, but I would also put in acronyms into many of
my previews & reviews for the GF.com site. It was more of a personal
amusement thing, but damn hard sometimes... my favorite was a Hot Wheels PSX
game review that, if you took the first letter of each paragraph, spelled out C
U N... you get the picture. Man, that was deep dark secret that up until now
only my wife knew about.
I'm with Nintendo now, and will probably
stay that way for a nice long time. I'm looking to get out of my current
position though and will probably be making the trek up north to WA in the near
future. And to add a little self promotion in this post, in the very near
future I'll be doing the blog thing too at http://www.squidtv.com
Oh and BTW, Jay Boor is back in the states
now - doing PR for a mobile phone publisher. Next time I'm in the Bay doing my
rep thing I'll probably do lunch with him... we'll see.
===================
Waka FROM EVILNET:
Waka ver. 2.0
posted January 04, 2005 07:11 AM
Heh. Layabout? I walk around the house
every now and then. That counts as something, right? RIGHT?
Good to see you back though. From the sound
of stuff, looks like you had a cool time. Hope everyone had a cool vacation as
well. [Smile]
Well damn. I was hoping people would get
over this GameFan shit already, but it seems that no matter how much time goes
by, it always comes back to haunt me. If there's anyone that knows the stories,
I have tons of skeletons to let out of the closet. Not like I'd care. Although
I have to admit that I have had some very fond memories of GF, and I've had my
share of pretty messed up times.
This is what I know.
Bruce Stockert went back to North Dakota. For
what? I have no clue. I guess I would since there was practically nothing left
after GF imploded.
Eric Mylonas was doing strategy guides for
Brady or whatever. If I remember correctly, he was working with Matt for a
while after GameFan went kaput, no?
Tyrone worked at Activision last time I
heard. This was when I was working at Hyper Game Action before they also closed
down.
George (former GF designer that started the
mag with Tim back in the day) was working at Atari last I heard.
Terry Wolfinger went to work for Stan
Winston on various stuff. Including a Michael Jackson video.
Fernando went back to Maryland (or was it
Maine?) to live with his mother and actually appeared on several news stories
there. If you remember, he was taking steroids for his medical condition. Since
he was legally on medicated marijuana, he joined a group to 'reach out' about
legalizing it. With court hearings to boot. He was a good guy.
Jay Puryear is still messing around in the
gaming industry last time I heard. As for what company or position, I have no
idea.
Jacob (one of the designers as well back in
the day) went to work for a game company. I think it was either Eidos or
Activision. I remember him coming to GF to plug a game he was working on, and
Puryear and I nearly had a heart attack when he came in. Small world.
Matt Taylor (yes he worked at GF at one
time and did the Mortal Kombat guide.) He went on and started Versus Books. Pretty
successfully I might add.
Casey Lowe and Ryan Iforgothislastname
worked with Matt Taylor at Versus with Nick for some time. I was actually going
to work with Matt as well, but the ass flaked on me. He just wanted the dirt on
GameFan.
Nick Des Barres (Nick Rox) went on and did
various stuff. Including winning the design contest for the Resident Evil movie
poster. I even got an e-mail from him asking to put an entry in. I have to add
that all of the other submissions were really shit. It's no wonder Nick won. He
was a talented designer as well.
Kelly (K. Lee). Oh man. He went on to work
at EGM way back in the day. Read on to find out what happened.
That's all I can remember for now. I'll add
more when I can remember.
Funny thing is that I see Tim is posting at
TNL. Funny shit. I vaguely remember meeting him up in Frisco at Dave Weising's
house (could have swore I shook his hand) to talk about Kei's endeavor with
them. I had to take a nap because I only got about 4 hours of sleep the night
before and we drove over 7 hours up there to see them. And I drove back roughly
two hours after the meeting with them after we went to Wendy's. I got a fucking
ticket on the way home as well, LOL. [Big Grin] I think I just fell asleep
while I was driving and my foot stayed on the gas. Cop said he was following me
for about 6 miles. D'oh!
Now for the old school stories. Woot! [Smile]
Jay Boor: Masshole.
I remember back when GF Online was one of
those places where you can hang out and see what 'new' thing Levi got in his e-mail
or new 'name' someone got plastered with. I remember walking up front where
Melissa was one day and seeing if I got any mail. I was talking to Elaine when
I noticed she was kinda spacing out towards the window as if she was trying to
see something in the parking lot.
Fast forward about 7 hours.
Jay and I are talking about some crap when
he tells me he'll be back in about 10 minutes. Thinking nothing of it, I went
to get a soda from the fridge in the kitchen cause it was fucking hot. I hear
Melissa and Elaine with their "OMG!" and "WTF!" voices. Jay
is laughing his ass off (well trying not to - you know Jay), and trying to
cover his ass about something he obviously did. I ask Melissa what happened,
and she gives me this stern face. Uh oh. Jay already hit a nerve and was in
trouble.
I found out that he left his girlfriend in
the car (yes, that long!) in the heat, and acted like he did nothing wrong. WTF!
I asked him WHY he left his girlfriend in the car for over seven hours, and he
just said... "It's embarassing enough that I walk around in public with
her. Why the fuck would I want to bring her inside?" I busted out in laughter
and I knew that was so wrong. But I later found out that she was just a really
shy person and was comfortably sleeping in the car the whole time becuase she
was tired. Still. Funny shit though.
Kelly (K. Lee) Tyrone Biggums?
Where should I start? I know it's messed up
to make fun of someone who's life got completely messed up, but you can't help
to bring this one up during the old GF reminiscence sessions. Now this guy was
an oreo cookie. Black on the outside but whiter than most white people I know,
inside. This actually strings on to Nick's antics.
He appearantly got addicted to meth
sometime during the first time I quit (or what people called a Wakabout). One
of the first things he asked me when I came back was "Hey dude, good to
see you back! Umm, can I ask you something later?"
WTF?
Anyways, later I'm alone and he asks me "Hey.
Umm.... Can... You get some crystal meth? You know... for a friend of mine..."
Who the fuck is he kidding? I told him I can, but I'm not gonna bring it to
work. That was the last time he ever brought it up with me. Yeah. Like those
pawn shop reciepts on your desk for over 400 dollars in jewelry was because you
had no money for food right?
Well, I recall him getting fired at GF for
something (the reson eludes me). Time goes on and a few years later we all hear
he's doing awesome at EGM. They paid for his moving expenses, got him a company
credit card, and was actually making a decent amount of money (he had a baby to
raise as well). It's quiet for a while, and then we hear this shit.
Appearently, his addiction followed him all
the way up north. He ran up the company credit card on crazy shit (probably
pawned it on stuff for you know what), lost his house and his wife ran off with
his crack dealer. With the baby. Talk about messed up. >_<
Nick Des Barres (Nick Rox): Shup foo! Recognize!
OK. I think Nick was actually a really cool
person. Once you really get to know him, he's a really nice guy. I just can't
believe all of the shit people gave him. Anyway.
Nick was notoriously known for speaking
like a black person (full ebonics!). He told me it was because his school was 98%
black people, and it rubbed off on him. I knew where he was going to school as
well, and I can totally agree. So sometimes during the delirium from crunch
time, we would do stupid shit to give us that extra steam we needed to go on. This
was one of those things. This was actually the birth of the famous "2
skoops!" line (StreetFighter double fireball reference in ebonics. Yes, it's
rasin bran pun.)
Now Kelly heard around the office that Nick
did an impressive 'black person' imitation, and he wanted so bad, to hear it. But
of couse Nick wasn't about to bust out with it in front of Kelly. Umm. Yes,
he's black. That would be a bit awkward, no? Everytime Nick would go into this
mode, Kelly would always miss it. Unless we triggered it, of course, Hehe.
One day, I was talking to Nick and I see
Kelly in the corner of my eye. We were standing there (I think Casey and Ryan
we there as well) and I busted out with "Wassupwiddat?!" then Nick
just went awol. He was going off on ebonics and waving his hands like the
gangsta he is for about 10 minutes. The whole time he was doing this, Kelly was
standing behind him. Listening. I couldn't take it anymore and started laughing.
Nick turned around and turned white as a ghost, then turned red from
embarassment. He stood there shocked for about a few seconds and said "Uhhh.
Hey Kelly..." and ran off into his office and slammed his door behind him.
Needless to say Kelly was very impressed
with his impression. After all, he was much 'blacker' than Kelly ever will be,
ROFL!
Damn should I go on? I got fucking tons of
this shit. [Razz]
=============
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by James
Shidoshi, if you want a pile of issues to
destroy for the purposes of scanning, speak up. I've got a pile collecting dust
here, and if I send them away then I won't hear their screams as you razor down
their spines.
Let me do some testing with my scanner to
see what kind of quality I can get. If I think it would be worth it for the
quality, I may indeed be interested in your offer.
Also, I'd like to say the more history I
can collect about GameFan, the better. So anybody with stories, post away. And maybe
this can be a part two of the GameGO thread were all of these past editors came
out of the woodwork. *heh*
It won't be for my moma.bible GameFan
entry, because the point of that is strictly to be a non-POV informational page
about the basics of what GameFan is. I do, however, have another idea for
something, but I can't get into that just yet.
====
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by kdeselms
Nick pointed this thread out to me on my
blog's message board and so I wrote a long-ass post about GameFan Online during
my tenure.
Very interesting read, Kevin. You're right -
I had little perspective on what was going on with the site at that point, and
to be honest, the magazine in general.
One of my big regrest is the point at which
I was part of GameFan, and the website, in terms of my personal life and
experience. I wish I was heading to GameFan now with the knowledge that I now
have, as opposed to what I had at that point. My experience with websites was
so minimal at that point, and I look back at what I did and do a lot of
cringing.
For those who don't know, this is how I
became part of gamefan.com. Well, actually, let me go a bit further back. I got
my start with GameFan the one (and only time, I believe) that there was an
actual "writers wanted" ad published in the magazine. At that point,
I had done a number of fanzine publications, I was an unoffical staff member of
GameOn! USA (Viz's short lived video game magazine), I was part of their J-pop.com
website project, and I had done a thing or two for Animerica. (I think I had,
at that point. It might have been a bit later that I started doing freelance
for Animerica, though.)
I sent in my resume, copies of my fanzines,
and some other work. I got a call from Dave, and a few months later I flew out
to SoCal with the intent of being one of the new video game reviewers for the
magazine at the same point that people like Mike Griffen (Glitch) and Michael
Hobbs (Substance D) were also joining the magazine. Unfortunately, things
didn't work out quite like that. I think some of the people there weren't as
happy with my writing as they were hoping to be, and I think part of that was
that I was pretty rough on the games that I reviewed. So, anyhow, I ended up
getting a lot less work as far as reviewing game reviews than I was initially
set to get.
Because of that, it was decided that I was
to help out Ryan Lockhart (Orion), who was then head of the GameFan website. I
was then given the shittest job I could have had at GameFan; when press
releases came in by fax or mail, I would sit there and manually retype the
entire press release so that it could be put up on the website. Trust me, it
sucks as much as it sounds like it would. After a while, it was decided that
they wanted an AnimeFan section for the website, and that task was given to me.
Initially the design was handled by the IT guys, but then later re-design of
the website was handed over to me. At that point, I had so little experience
with designing websites that the result was utterly hideous. It was used,
however, and I was then in charge of AnimeFan Online. (While also, of course,
still retyping press releases.)
Two factors worked against this. First, the
computer I had to use at the office was utter crap, and not meant for anything
beyond some simple text editing and whatnot. To be fair, though, the hardware
available at the GameFan Offices was for a long time at that kind of level. Everybody
there was forced to push their hardware farther than it was ever meant to go. The
other problem was that I had never run any sort of website, I didn't have a
feel for what it took to run one, and I have ALWAYS been crap when it comes to
coming up with news out of the air. I've never been very good at that. Finding
news and interesting information from other places, that I'm good at, but I
didn't want to make a site that was simply content pulled from other sites and
sources. (Of course, now you have sites like Slashdot that are famous for being
that very thing.) So the site was a small smattering of news, backed up by a
bunch of reviews and a few other kinds of things.
I think Ryan really disliked the stress of
having to find new and interesting content on a daily basis, and having to also
beg and plead the magazine writers to help out with previews, reviews,
screenshots, and whatnot. At a certain point, I think he just snapped, and
decided he had had enough. Ryan stepped down from running the site, and I was
pushed into running the site by myself. Here's a word to the wise - when you
have a real, "major" site, don't put somebody with only a minimal
amount of experience running a website into that position. The thing that
worked into my favor was that, back then, there weren't a lot of people who had
experience running websites, so people with little experience could run one and
still possibly get away with it.
So I found myself running GameFan.com, with
no experience running a site that size, no industry contacts, no experience
talking to industry contacts, no idea where I was supposed to be getting news
from, or anything. For a while, I hated it, and the site totally sucked. After
a while, I just sort of said, "Fuck it," and started running the site
as I would my own personal fansite. This had two effects, I think. First, we
felt a lot more like a fansite than any of the other "majors" out
there. The other was that I think we were a lot more fun than any of the majors
out there. *heh* I honestly still can't believe I got away with some of the
stuff I did. After a while, Bryn Williams (the Guvnor) joined up, and he was
pretty close to the same type of personality that I was. He also wasn't totally
clear on what to do for content, so we ended up producing even more of the kind
of stuff I had been doing. I think the site really felt like the mag, though,
and we did stuff a lot of other large sites weren't doing. We had Jun (J-bomb) translate
stuff for Japanese games almost nobody had ever heard of, and we'd do up big
articles with a bunch of screenshots, artwork, etc. (For example, we did a big
write-up on Atelier Marie.)
I think that what Bryn and I were doing, it
wasn't what needed to be done for bringing in the visitors or ad dollars, but
it was a lot of fun, and it was different and interesting at the time. That
isn't to diss the era of the site when Kevin and them were running it: the site
under the two regimes were totally different beasts, and each were great for
different reasons.
====
kdeselms
Quote Originally Posted by Clash_Master
I am more interested in what happend to
Cerberus, The Judge, Eggo (still with Tecmo?), and those folks I guess.
I added a "Where are they now" thing
to my post on my forum, yesterday - that'll give you a rough idea of what's
happening with alumni from my time there, at least with those I have contact
with...I've lost touch with a lot of them and only have "last known
whereabouts" basically. George left Tecmo ages ago, he's been in test at
Activision for a couple years at this point, I think.
======
djpubba
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite
What was the deal with the Monitor guy (or
whatever he was called)? Who came up with him, and why? Was he around since the
beginning, and why was he dumped?
Monitaur was a character which Greg Off
used to doodle before getting a job at DieHard GameClub. When GameFan was
started and the subject of having a mascot came up, Greg suggested they use his
character and they thought it was a great idea. Terry Wolfinger took over the
drawing of the character from the first cover onward (there's a good story
surrounding the first cover, I'll tell soon). I didn't realize they ever dumped
him.
=====
Shidoshi
I don't think it was that he was dumped... for
a while he just sort of disappeared, and then in the last year or so of
GameFan, he was given more face time again. But, not to the point where he was
on the cover of every issue, like he used to be. My guess is that his being on
the cover with various video game characters was inspired by Famitsu and their
fox mascot
==========
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Compass
Also Evil Lights. He just disappeared all
the sudden. I remember a reader asking about him (prolly in the letters section)
and the answer was onimous (like he did something terrible and would never be
heard of again). But that's my memory which is hazy.
Dead, I believe. Can't remember if it was
suicide or not.
Was it a couple specific guys in charge of
all the layouts or did the writers chip in too? I remember there was some
really artistic, pleasing-to-the-eye stuff in Gamefan that's yet to be seen
elsewhere (including PLAY). I think it was FFVII or VIII had a particularly
gorgeous layout.
There was a core group of people who did
layouts, and then a few people who did their own. Nick, for example, pretty
much always did his own. Same, I believe, for Casey. (Takuhi) When I went back
to doing more game reviews, I did almost all my own layouts. (SamSho 4 was my
first stab at doing a layout.) I also did all of the AnimeFan stuff as well
when I was in charge of it.
I remember there were a few issues where
the staff was ribbing him about his "chronologically challenged" girlfriend.
And then later about how he was breaking up a marriage. Sounds like a wildcat.
I think Eggo's girlfriend was jailbait, or
something to that effect.
Quote Originally Posted by Compass
What's Takuhi doing now? He was my favorite
reviewer after Halvy and ECM. Although he did go a bit overboard on the first
Suikoden.
I know for a while, he was working at
Versus Books with Nick. The last listing for a book from him that I could find
was 2003, though.
=========
isamu
If "Evil Lights" is the same
reviewer as "Stalker", then the person he is referring to is Dan
Grannet....who died in a car accident sometime in late 1998. A very close
friend of mine as well.
============
Shidoshi
Okay, it's quite possible I got the two
people mixed up. I knew that one of the staff members ended up dying, but I
guess I got the wrong one.
========
djpubba
Okay, time for the story of the first
GameFan cover.
It was one day from our first deadline and
we had no cover art. That morning, George Weising came in and said that he had
met this dude at a game store in Newhall, CA (High Tech Game Center), who did
artwork for Heavy Metal, and was looking for work. We all thought, cool! THE
Heavy Metal, like, you know -- the movie and magazine -- this stranger's
artwork will blaze with fiery balls of joyful bliss! So we gave the dude a call
and told him to come in with some work samples. This skinny blonde guy named
Terry Wolfinger showed up in short order and showed us his art and it was indeed
reasonably blazing. So Halverson showed him a cover of Famitsu and asked if he
could airbrush something of that quality. He said he could, so we told him that
if he could do us a cover we could use for our first issue and have it to us in
the morning, he was hired. We showed him Monitaur and told him to draw him,
Sonic, Mario and Bonk busting out of the cover. He said he'd do his best and
went home. Meanwhile, we set to work burning the midnight oil to finish the
rest of this issue. Around 5 AM, Terry called and said he ran out of ink for
the background but was on his way over with the art. Around a quarter to six in
the AM, he arrived and presented the artwork. It was fab, except the background
was a blotchy red color. So we scanned it and turned the background black. I
created the logo in a 3D program on the Mac called Infini-D. On my IIx it took,
like 3 hours to render. When it was done, I noticed that I screwed up and had
the wrong texture on the "DieHard" part of the logo, but it didn't
look too bad, so we called it done and we had our cover and a new staff
illustrator!
One of the next things we had Terry draw
was Sonic humping Tails. Sadly, that joyous drawing never saw the presses.
It turned out that Terry didn't actually
have anything to do with anything Heavy Metal(tm). What he had done was some
animation work on a heavy metal themed animation straight to video series
called "Hard and Heavy". George had somehow, err, got them mixed up.
Something Terry never told anyone but me
was that, on his way home from that meeting, he stopped at an art supply store
and bought a book on how to airbrush because, while he did have an airbrush, he
had never airbrushed anything more than some smoke and clouds before! So not
only did he crank out a fabluvulous piece of art in less than 24, he taught
himself how to airbrush in the process. (I checked with him to make sure it was
okay to spill those beans here. He said it'd be okay if only I plugged his
site, Cursed Amusement).
http://www.terrywolfinger.com/
========
MELF
Quote Originally Posted by Kraftwerks
Whatever happened to Fernando Mosquera? I
remember visiting Seganet everyday.
He got sued by Sega over the SegaNet name. Last
I heard, he joined Game Fan online, didn't he?
http://www.adrforum.com/domains/decisions/95469.htm
========
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by djpubba
Oh, there's a doosy of a story behind that
one. I shit you not, but Halverson was high on acid when he wrote the
Cybermorph article, along with half the staff. We had just pulled a couple of
all-nighters in a row, which was the norm at deadline times. Apparently, when
The Enquirer came back to work the next morning, he dropped some acid in the
coffee pot, which most of the crew, including Halverson, drank from. I wasn't a
coffee drinker at the time so I didn't really notice anything unusual and
didn't learn what was going on until George started threatening to murder
Cockburn.
Yup. It was all true! I was there too!
=========
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by kevincal
Welcome!!!! You're a hell of an artist man.
Thanks very much! I'm sure I can add to the
stories part of this post too
==========
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by Shidoshi
The morning of payday, we'd call to make
sure that there was at least something in there. The moment checks were handed
out, everybody would run out to their cars, and Cannonball Run style, race to
the closest branch of that bank to cash the checks. If you got there too late,
you were out of luck...
Yep, this happened every payday very
shortly after
Metropolis and Dave Bergstien became
involved. It was quite a ridiculous way to run a company and quite an insane
event to witness. No matter what time of day, if you called the bank and found
there was money, it was into you cars and race to the branch. I had one of the
faster cars at the the time (a twin turbo RX7) so I was usually one of the
first to arrive. It was usually quite a scene at the bank too- 8 to 12 guys
rushing inside and trying to cash they're payroll checks all at once... There
was one time where I came up to the teller and handed my check to have cashed,
and the teller confirmed that the funds were there but needed to get the
transaction authorized. Well by the time she got her manager to sign it, the
funds were gone due to someone getting their checked cashed just a moment
quicker...
It was complete bullshit to put up with,
but I think we all thought that GameFan would pull through for the sheer fact
we all loved the mag and loved what we did. I ened up staying till the end, but
did not return for the "resurrection" year... sigh....
Quote Originally Posted by Rumpy
Hey Wolf! Are you working on any projects
now?
Yes, quite a few. Some recent work you may
have seen has been the game, "The Suffering" where I did Character
Design, and also I worked on the film "TerMinator3" where I designed
Arnie's FX make-up. Also did some character designs for Midway's Area 51 remake
which should be due out soon.
Presently I'm working on a graphic novel
doing all the art. I also work quite a bit with djpubba (Tim) on various game
boxes etc...
==========
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by Shidoshi
If you want to read about my past feelings
about Halverson, then hit this link. It's an archived page from Fatbabies that
came about when Halverson showed up on the GameGO message forum. As I said, I'm
over all of that now, and I'm sure he's quite a different person now as well.
http://www.fatbabies.com/story_sept-oct01.html
Well said, Shidoshi. Although I seriously
doubt Dave has changed much since then. I have never met anyone that would just
bold-face lie directly to your face like Halverson would. Except when Bergstien
came along... man, those two were a match made in Hell.
And sorry about your mad scientist
character, but I was just following Dave's orders. :-(
He could be pretty mean-spirited with that
shit. Especially if you dressed or looked a little differently.
=====
djpubba
I've got a neat paycheck story. After
GameFan was 6-7 issues old, the ad money wasn't paying the bills and the
investor who had bankrolled GameClub and the start of GameFan, Andy Fell, was
getting tired of throwing away his money. So Halverson started looking for more
investors. He hit up everyone, including employees and employee's families. From
my speaking to them, I gather he got at least three of them to invest somewhere
around 50-60k between them. He also found a lady who owned a beauty salon who
was interested in investing. Her name was Elaine Shings. I heard rumors that
she put in around 70k but I don't know if that was all of it or if that was
accurate. To make sure her money was invested wisely, though, Elaine insisted
on becoming the office manager and being in charge of the payroll and expense
account, which she did. We were all pretty happy about this because the pay was
never steady, but there always seemed to be enough money in the tills to pay
for neon signs, custom embroidered jackets and lots of other expensive,
unnecessary stuff like that. So we figured with Elaine in charge of the
checkbook, we could rest assured that everything would be on the up and up.
Well, no more than 2 or 3 weeks after
Elaine started working in the office, Jay came round to tell everyone not to
cash their paychecks quite yet. He said that Halverson had broken into Elaine's
desk, taken the checkbook, and bought a 3' Sonic the Hedgehog statue with the
payroll money, so we should wait until Elaine said it was okay to cash checks.
It was at this point that I got the sinking
feeling that Halverson was the devil himself and I had better tie up some loose
ends that had gone unresolved for far too long. That leads into the story of
how I left GameFan, which I'll leave untold for now.
I know none of the employees ever saw a
penny of their investments returned, but I hope at least Elaine stuck in long
enough that she got some money back when Metropolis took over. I was gone by
then so I don't know.
Good lord, there really are a lot more
interesting things to tell about GameFan.
==========
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by djpubba
Okay, time for the story of the first
GameFan cover.
All pretty accurrate except for the
timeline. I actually met George a few weeks prior to the deadline for the first
issue. I was introduced as Tim said, and did indeed tell them I had done
finished airbrush art (when in fact I barely used one when I had to paint
clouds!) So they gave me a test assignment to produce finished art of a Sonic,
a Bonk piece, and a something with a fighting game character. So away I went
and picked up a "How to Airbrush" book that was also a kit. It had a
couple projects laid out in it with a few supplies. The first I attempted was a
big letter "E" and how to paint it to look like chrome. Well that
thing came out so piss-poor and ugly... man, it was just the worst thing you'd
ever seen. If I had shown them that they woulda laughed in my face and thrown
me out the door. But I had learned a bit what not to do. So I had about 3 days
to turn in the projects, unfortunately the same weekend I was meeting my family
in Pismo Beach to go wheeling in the sand dunes. So I brought my supplies and
materials to the hotel room to work on them there.
So as luck would have it, my first day out
riding I get a piece of sand caught in my eye and scratch my cornea all up to
Hell. After coming back from the hospital I now have to complete my 3 projects
with an eyepatch on, "Arrr!" So what else can wrong. Well I managed
to make it thru and the 3 projects came out surprisingly well (for a novice
that is, ha!). Then this is when they said they'd need a cover by tonight! So
yeah... pulled an all-nighter and was almost done with it, when I just drag my
hand thru Mario's still wet moustache and ruined several hours work... fun to
paint when you're tired...
After another couple hours of sloppily
repairing Mario, I deliver the cover 30 mins away. They liked it so I start
back home just as the sun is coming up and then I actually fall asleep at the
wheel! I changed a full lane on the freeway before waking back up and nearly
hitting a motorhome. And that was the beginning of my GameFan career.
Quote Originally Posted by djpubba
So Halverson started looking for more
investors. He hit up everyone, including employees and employee's families. From
my speaking to them, I gather he got at least three of them to invest somewhere
around 50-60k between them...
...I know none of the employees ever saw a
penny of their investments returned, but I hope at least Elaine stuck in long
enough that she got some money back when Metropolis took over. I was gone by
then so I don't know.
This is also why I stuck it out for as long
as I did. My father invested 30k for some profit-sharing percentage that never
happened. And Dave did not make one effort to pay him or the other's back. He
did show up on a brand new Ninja motorcycle one day tho, that he paid cash for.
How does one sleep at night doing the shit he did?
================
Wolfie
Here's a fun one:
GameFan's first trip to the CES (consumer
electronics show) in LAs Vegas to get some attention and advertisers for the
mag. This was way back in '93 or so. Way before E3. Anyway, so a bunch of the
guys go a couple days early to check everything out, then a bunch come a couple
days later, myself and Jay Puryear included. So Jay and I are to share a room (oh
joy), and this is the room previously shared by The Enquirer (Cockburn) and K. Lee.
So we get there and the room is thrashed- the beds are all unmade, condom
wrappers everywhere... (oh boy times two)
So the next day we are told that after
asking Halverson for money for food etc... that K. Lee, The Enquirer, and Kai
Kuboki promptly went and used that money to buy a hooker which they then all
shared. Then they all played Yoshi's Island.
========
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite
Question: how hard is it to learn to use an
airbrush, and do you still use it? Is Photoshop a better alternative in your
opinion?
Hey, thanks a lot. Learning the airbrush is
a bit tricky; mixing paint, keeping it from clogging, cleaning it... Photoshop
is much more forgiving (unlimitted undo's!)
Funny about the monitaur statues. I
actually helped design them but never got to see the finished project. I saw a
small scale prototype but that was it. I figured it was just another of
Bergstiens fantasies. But it kinda makes sense now- pour the company's money
into giant fiberglass Monitaur statues instead of employee paychecks. Wonder
why GameFan collapsed...
:rollseyes:
Quote Originally Posted by Jeremy
Hahaha, that's probably the funniest story
yet. The stolen funds stuff is just pathetic though. Halverson being Halverson
is probably his eternal punishment.
Pathetic is a good way to describe
Halverson.
Shidoshi was spot-on with his description
of the Mulleted-One. I seriously doubt he has changed. He did in fact start his
life as a used car salesman.
There's a bit more to the Vegas CES story
as well, but I'll have to think about that one....
========
Shidoshi
Uh oh... ex-GameFan staffer +1. *heh*
Like I said, I'm willing to believe he's
changed. I don't agree with a lot of the things that went down during my time
at GameFan, but I also know that if you don't know the whole story on things,
it is easy to fill in the gaps with mis-information and incorrect assumptions. Sort
of the same way that it's easy to form an opinion of somebody know you only via
the internet that ends up being wrong.
I won't take back what I've said about him
in the past, but at the same time, I'm willing to get past all of that and give
him a chance for who he is now. I look back at who I was back at that point, and
I would hope that people would look at my more for who I am now than who I was
then. *heh*
And sorry about your mad scientist
character, but I was just following Dave's orders He could be pretty mean-spirited
with that shit. Especially if you dressed or looked a little differently.
Trust me, no hard feelings at all. My one
Terry story, since I didn't have a lot of encounters with you, was right before
I "left" the magazine. (When I moved back to Nebraska, but kept
running the AnimeFan section.) Terry had put a lot of work into a brand new
version of my character, which then only got used once - in the comic where all
of the old staff members were killed off, and the remaining staff members were
searching through the rubble.
Quote Originally Posted by IronPlant
I forget, it would have been around the
time GF had it's own quake2 server. I remember playing with a bunch of the GF
and GR staff a few times.
I can't remember exactly if it was Quake or
Quake 2, but this was what pretty much got me into playing FPSs. I liked Doom
and whatnot before that, but I swore by the control pad when playing them. Dan
Jevons tried everything he could to get me to try keyboard + mouse, assuring me
that it was the only proper way to play. I simply couldn't believe him, and was
stubborn about trying it for a long time. Finally, I broke down, and finally
saw the light. I spent many a night after hours in the office playing against
the other guys.
==============
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by diffusionx
Thats hot, way better than working on
fucking videogame mags.
Yeah, don't get me wrong, I enjoyed my time
at GameFan and loved doing the work and met some really great people, but yeah,
it was nice to move on as well.
===============
Prince Planet
All this talk makes me want to go and pull
the Bergstein/Metropolis (Game Cave) file. I can at least tell you how some of
the ugly litigation turned out. Most of the allegations were what you'd expect --
lots of hooks onto investors, and then a fabulous disappearing act with the
money.
========
djpubba
Oh yeah, do it. I wish I could post some of
the choice parts of the depositions from when they sued Dimension.
Here's some memorabilia I dug up:
That's the catalog which eventually turned
into GameFan. This was made before I even had my own Mac. I did it at my
workplace on a proprietary Harris PLS system which was used primarily to do the
ads on shopping carts and the back of grocery store receipts.
That's a shot of the retail store that we
started GameFan in the back of. This was on Ventura blvd in Tarzana, CA. Note
the front door looks like a floppy disk. So 80's.
That's us making the magazine on my IIx. Left:
Cockburn. Middle: Halvy. Right: Me. This was pre-issue one. Cockburn was taking a GameClub order.
==============
BonusKun
That I'll leave up to Mina to explain if
she sees this thread. It's been a long time & I've forgotten most of the
details. More or less it was after some shit with Seganet that Dave tried
holding her Website and all her work hostage.
==============
bahn
Man, Mina isn't going to bother coming here
to explain - she's too busy with SZ and OA. Nice to see ya again - how long has
it been, 10 years?
==============
Wolfie
Actually Tim Lindquist (djpubba) was the
first ex GF staffer here other than you He gave me the heads up at any rate.
And I'm not trying to sway your opinion (D.H.),
nor is mine based on what I read on the internet. I worked with the guy from
issue one and have seen plenty of his "character" or lack there-of. If
he has truly changed you'd think he'd try to make some sort of ammends or
something. but that sure hasn't happened.
Anyways, glad there are no hard feelings
about the character stuff ;-)
===========
Wolfie
Wow. Blast from the past! Lookit all that
long hair! I have a pic or two I'll have to send you ;-)
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite
I remember being very "WTF" when
I read that comic. Really, what was the point of it? A final "Fuck You"
to the departing staff? What exactly went down before that issue went to press
that inspired the comic? Did Rox, Halverson, and a bunch of others just walk?
Weren't you guys coming back from a hiatus at that point?
Halverson up and abandoned ship. He took
some key people with him, promised to take others, but basically threw GameFan
into a tail-spin. Those that stayed were pretty pissed-off yes. Jay Puryear
came into my office and said, "T, lets say goodbye to some of our
characters." I was surprised at how viscious he wanted me to go with. Any
editors with sore feeling about that, my appologies. Halvy...? Well, I saw him
one time after that at an E3 I think in Atlanta. And the one thing he said to
me was, "You made E. Storm a drooling vegetable in the Mullet Ward?!!"
He was pretty upset. It was pretty funny.
=========
djpubba
Here are the pics T sent me.

Wolfinger, Seltzer, Cockburn, Kuboki in
Chicago. CES '93 or '94?

Dave Halverson

Julie and Dave

Just relaxing
splotch on the shirt?
Something, um, accidentally, uh, fell on
the picture. No, really it's just something that happened to the picture over
the years. Same with the straw in his hair.
============
djpubba
Ahh, the Graveyard. That was the very first
section of GameFan that was ever designed and this reminds me of the story of
how it was done.
When Dave started getting serious about
really, truely starting a magazine, I agreed to bring my computer into GameClub
and work there full time. When I showed up and plunked my equipment down in the
back of the store, we hadn't agreed on what my salary would be yet. So I told
Dave what I'd need to survive, he said sure, no problem. Then, the next day he
didn't show up for work. So I twiddled my thumbs and messed around with ideas
all day. The next day, he didn't show up either. Julie (his live-in girlfriend
and employee at the store) came to me and said Dave was deathly ill and she
didn't know when he'd be back to work. So I decided to just start designing
sections, and picked one to do from the media kit we had made (see earlier this
thread). I started with the Graveyard section and worked on that stuff all week.
At the end of the week I asked Julie if she'd be giving me my paycheck. She
said something like, "Oh, Dave talked to Andy, the money guy, and he
doesn't want to pay you. So Dave wants to know if you'll take a percentage
ownership of the magazine instead, and we'll just give you whatever extra money
we can out of our pockets, like, whenever you really need some money." I
really wanted the magazine to work, so being young and naive, I agreed. Coincidentally,
Dave got better right after that and was back to work on Monday, good as new!
Whew, glad we didn't lose him to that
mystery illness! It must have really strengthened his immune system, too, cause
I don't recall him taking a sick day for the next 12 months straight!
More pics I found:

Me checking out the latest issue.

Terry and I celebrating something.
==========
djpubba
Terry and I were metal heads. That's a
Slayer shirt I'm wearing in the pic of Terry and I, a Metallica shirt in the
one of my reading the mag and a Danzig shirt in the one of Cockburn, Halvy and
I earlier in the thread. I have short hair now, but I still like metal. Here's
a more current pic (from E3).
I'd probably grow it long again but it
doesn't grow in fully any more ever since it all fell out from chemo (lymphoma,
currently in remission, knock on wood).
==========
Wolfie
Ha! You're reading one of the first
Monitaur comics! And man... all that hair!!
Yes, Tim and I listened to the hardcore
stuff and I had previously worked at a heavy metal video company.
===========
Shidoshi
Not a magazine story, but a staff story. The
first and only time Shidoshi has tried hallucinatory drugs. *heh* I'll use
their magazine names, as not to directly use their real names. I doubt they
would care, though.
I was roommates with Glitch, and one night
his friend showed up with shrooms. Substance D soon showed up, and the three of
them were going to enjoy some time doing that. Up until that point, I had
smoked pot maybe three, four times in my entire life, so I wasn't exactly
versed in the ways of those things. I was curious, though, and thought that if
I was ever going to try something, I'd try something like that instead of
something a bit more hazardous.
So, we took them, and then decided to walk
up to the convenience store real quick to get something to drink. At first, I
didn't thing I was feeling anything, and then all of a sudden I was in the
store and I couldn't stop laughing. We get home, and we're sitting around in
Glitch's room. I'm sitting there, sitting on the floor, leaning against his
closet door. On his wall he had a poster for Battle Angel, the pic off of the
DVD cover. Suddenly, Gally (the chick from BA), looks at me, smiles, and walks
off of the poster. That wasn't what freaked me out - what I thought was freaky
was that there part of the poster where she had been was perfectly fine, no
hole cut out or anything.
Glitch and his friend get up and go
outside, so it's me and Substance D there. Somehow the room's light had been
turned off, but Glitch's TV was turned on to the video input channel, so the
room was this strange blue color. His Saturn had also been turned on, and it
was playing the music from Dark Reign, or something like that... it was a 2D
fighter for Saturn. I remember sitting there, and the music was freaking me out
so much, but I couldn't get up to turn it off. So, I begged Substance D to turn
it off for me. He got up, walked over to the Saturn, gave it a look for a few
moments like it was some sort of alien technology he couldn't comprehend, and
want back and sat back down on the bed. A minute or so later, I begged him
again to turn it off, and he got up, walked over to look at it for a moment,
and then sat back down. This repeated probably five or six more times.
===========
Wolfie
And here's a link to a more recent pic of
me as well, maybe a couple years old.
http://www.deviantart.com/deviation/6664770/
Also if anyone's interested, there's a
whole bunch of my newer art in the gallery here that's not anywhere else,
including a lot of The Suffering character art.
===========
Dolemite
I remember the time I won Gamefan Online's
'pick a PS2 mascot' contest (of course, I entered a Photoshopped Dolemite pic).
I won, but I never got the promised copy of "Without Limits",
autographed by ex-Power Ranger Amy Jo Johnson.
I took a screen cap of my winning entry as
it appeared on the GF Online page, I'll see if I can find it tomorrow when I
get to work.
===========
Shidoshi
Nick originally wasn't interested in
getting to know me, because somebody in the office told him that I was hot for
him in a gay love kinda way. *heh*
==========
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite
The Suffering was a cool-ass game. Nice
work. What was the deal with that, anyway? I know Stan Winston Studios did the
creature designs...did you do the official artwork based on their designs, or
were you directly involved in the character/monster design process as well?
I was working at Stan's when that project
came thru. I was a creature designer on the game yes.
Quote Originally Posted by Clash_Master
Who did the art in ECM years of GameFan? Or
was that still you Wolfie? Because the art style was very different.
I had left and was making games by the time
ECM had come to power. I guess they got that other guy very cheap.
=============
john tv
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite
BTW, I used to have a Diehard Gamer's Club
near me years ago in Manhasset. I used to take a drive out there on a fairly
regular basis. Cool place, they had a Monitaur statue bursting out of a wall in
the back over the counter where the import toys and stuff were kept. They had a
nice selection of Japanese games, mags, controllers, etc. However, the demo
area that they advertised in every issue of Gamefan (where you could hang out
and play games) was never turned on.
I remember they had a rack where they had
what appeared to be every single back issue of Gamefan...I finally decided one
day that I was going to head on over and pick up all the issues that I was
missing. Of course, that was right when the store went under and closed.
Were you a regular customer? I actually
worked at that store for about nine months before I started freelancing and
eventually shipped off to Chicago to work for ZD (Sendai at the time). I had a
good time working there -- it was one of the better DHGC spin-offs, and I got
to meet some cool people from being there every day (like Joe Madureira, who
was a regular customer, and Peter Mui, who was just getting NCS off the ground
at the time).
I'll never forget when we got the call from
Dave (or it may have been Julie that day, I forget) demanding that we take all
of the current issues of GameFan off the rack because of the 'Jap bastard'
incident. They asked us to remove the polybags, rip out the offending pages and
then put the mags back on the racks. We complied, but not before I nabbed five
unopened copies for myself, a few of which I still have today. :-)
Terry, nice to see you posting here -- your
art was great! Yours and Tim's stories are a real trip, too. I've made friends
with lots of former GFers over the years (Ryan, Kelly, Hoagie, Granett, Jevons,
etc.) and I never get tired of hearing tales of the 'glory days' of GF. My
favorite's always been the one about Kei wanking the dog, but that hooker story
definitely ranks up there with the best of 'em. :-)
Cheers,
-John
==========
djpubba
You know, screw writing a book about what
once was. We should put our effort instead into making something that is great
once again. Like, starting a new magazine in the spirit of GameFan. I think the
key to making it right, though, is to avoid having to go to money suits (investors)
to pay for it. I've seen enough magazines come and go, including ones I've
helped start, to know that suits tend to ruin 'em. So where do we get the money
to start one? Fuggit. The only thing we'd need money for is printing and paying
employees, so let's not print 'em or pay anyone. Let's start by giving each
issue away free to download (PDF) and all involved work just for the love of it
(i.e., for free).
Let's make a magazine that is all about our
love for games, and focus on reporting to other gamers what they want to know
about games before they buy them. Let's share the things we think are fun and
enjoyable about our gaming addiction and show respect and friendship to our
fellow gamers while doing it. Screw anyone who wants to try to get rich off our
love for games. That's what's wrong with all the current magazines. They're all
run by suits trying to make money by hiring gamers to make their products. Their
every motivation is to increase their profit. The gamers are their tools.
What made GameFan so great was that it was
run by the gamers. It could have ruled the world if Halverson wasn't such an
evil, lying, cheating fuck. It was all the gamers there putting their souls
into that magazine that made GameFan so good, not just Halverson. A magazine
made only by Halverson alone would be, well, like Play. (No offense to the
other guys at Play who do a fine job considering what I bet they have to put up
with).
I've never been in charge of my own
magazine because I've always been more interested in playing games than running
shit. But I've been in the magazine business long enough now that I know what
kind of things need to be done to make it work and what kind of things will
screw it all to hell. So I think I could run a magazine just fine. I can give
up some game time for that.
So who wants in? There's not much chance we
could get the GameFan name for it. I think the name Hardcore Gamer Magazine is
pretty good, though. I've already been talking to a bunch of people about it in
private and we've been generating material for a first issue. However, we're
lacking some key people to make it all come together and we recently put all
our effort into publishing the official strategy guides for Shin Megami Tensei:
Nocturne and Phantom Brave, which put the kybosh on the efforts. Now that those
are out of the way, I'm ready to get things rolling again. If we can find the
right kind of people, I think it could be a wonderful thing like GameFan was,
but without the psycho-drama bullshit going on in the background.
Here's the positions I think we need to
make it happen:
Editor in Chief - Responsible for deciding
who does what and what goes where and when. Responsible for the day-to-day
tasks of creating an issue. I've already got at least two people who could fill
this position immediately. One of them is another ex-GF guy.
Editor - The guy who makes sure what
everyone's writing and designing makes sense.
Art Director - responsible for the look of
the magazine. Section designs, logos, icons, etc. I know a few willing already,
but we need really some badass talent... someone with raw skill. A Nick Rox.
Illustrator - We already have Terry
Wolfinger, so we're pretty f'in set. However, if there are any other badass
mofos out there looking to help where help's needed, we'll check you out.
Production artists - responsible for adding
content to the sections -- adding the writer's text and shots to the art
director's designs. I have a few people willing to do this, too. Need more.
News editors - Folks who are constantly
posting news first on the message boards would be perfect -- like that Wario64
guy over on GAF. Also people fluent in Japanese to kype the news off Japanese
sources.
Reviewers - Most well suited would be
people with real debugs or just modded systems, but who already are known and
trusted by PR contacts in the industry so they'll send them betas. This is key.
No betas means no timely articles. However, we also need hardcore game fans
with just plain raw gaming talent who know how to tell it like it is and
connect with other like minded gamers. So any seasoned reviewers we find should
be willing to take new ones under their wing.
Writers - Special feature writers. Same as
above. Let's cover all the things gamers really dig. MAME cabinets, JAMMA
boards, hacking shit, finding games cheap, interviews with developers, game artwork
extravaganzas, cosplay, fanfic, fanart, game tournaments, gaming in Japan and
Europe (and elsewhere). No fashion-lifestyle bullcrap, though.
Strategists - People to write up game
strategies. People who write amazing FAQs already just 'cause they love it are
who we need. Too bad Chris McDonald died. He was the embodiment of that.
Codes Editor - Person who maintains the
cheats, codes, hints section. This is a HUGE pain in the ass. It'll take a very
special kind of person who loves maintaining a large database which constantly
needs correcting and updating, with very little reward. I do know one guy who
may still be up for it, though.
Sports Editor - Person to do all things
sport-like. Most sports gamers only like sports games. We have a guy like this
already and he's probably reading.
Web guys - html wizards.
Online programmers - Got one, may need more.
PR Evangelist - Person to contact various
video game publishers to get the word out about us, get us on their PR mailing
lists, preview and review code mailing lists, etc. Also to write press releases
announcing shit about us -- someone familiar with the current mainstream gaming
media PR machine. This is a key position as well. Without someone very good at
this, we come off looking like amatuers to the game company PR and marketing
people.
Ad salesperson - If we get popular enough
that there's demand enough to print real magazines, we'll need to pay the print
bills. And if this all turns into a shitload of work, the people making it
happen are going to need to get paid, too. So we'll need to get money. An ad
guy is the alternative to a money suit (investor). He works on commission, and
doesn't get no chunks of the magazine in return for the money he brings in,
like investors always seem to want. An ad guy who is a gamer would be ideal.
So if you're ready to throw yourself head
first into a thing like this, post here and/or email me (tim@djpub.com) or
Thomas Wilde (wanderer@djpub.com) and let us know what you can do to help turn
this dream into reality.
Okay, I've already stayed up past my
bedtime writing this, so g'night.
============
kdeselms
Quote Originally Posted by Wolfie
I had left and was making games by the time
ECM had come to power. I guess they got that other guy very cheap.
That artist was Patrick Spaziante, he'd
done a lot of comic book work (I think ECM got turned onto him by his work on a
Sonic/Knuckles book) and still does, I believe. He's pretty good, don't know
what his asking price was though. His cover quality largely depended on how
much time he was given. I really dug the character he did for me, but it
irritated Jay, Jody and ECM because Hi-Fi didn't look anything like me and
wasn't done in the traditional GameFan "not-so-subtly rip on the writer's
appearance or behavior" style.
Actually, Brandon (Big Bubba) named my
character - I couldn't think of one for myself, at the time...and I wasn't
going to use Jody's old nickname for me: Enis.
=======
AstroBlue
Quote Originally Posted by djpubba
Too bad Chris McDonald died. He was the
embodiment of that.
Which is depressing. Since he was
essentially "broken" because of for-profit ventures like EGM taking
advantage of things he created out of good will.
Are there any stories on the Something
Awful/GameFan connection? Weren't the websites linked or something?
==========
cka
Like I said earlier in the thread, SA was
hosted on the GameFan Network which was bought up by eFront (as was fighters.net
for about a year or so, and apparently Tracer's site posted above). eFront
really screwed us over on ad revenue and eventually there were lawsuits and all
sorts of other wacky crap flying through the air until eFront decided to fold
and go bankrupt -- and promptly run with our ad revenues*. That's the only
connection I'm aware of personally.
* - may/may not have went down that way but
that's how I remember it.
And djpubba: Best of luck to you on this
new magazine venture, however if it does fall short I'm certain we can find
some sort of non-paid sweatshop stuff for you to do on TNL if you're interested.
God knows we could use the help.
==========
WAKA
OMG.
I read the thread hijack at Kevin's
site and had to register to have my say in this as well. After all, I was
pretty much there when people were coming and going at GameFan. I've had my
share of "Wakabouts" as well. Heh.
Here's a cut and paste from Kevin's
site. With added stuff.
Bruce Stockert (Reubus) went back to
North Dakota. For what? I have no clue. I guess I would since there was
practically nothing left after GF imploded.
Eric Mylonas (ECM) was doing strategy
guides for Brady or whatever. If I remember correctly, he was working with Matt
(MVS) for a while after GameFan went kaput, no?
Tyrone Rodriguez (Cerebus) worked at
Activision last time I heard. This was when I was working at Hyper Game Action
before they also closed down.
George (former GF designer that started
the mag with Tim back in the day) was working at Atari last I heard.
Terry Wolfinger went to work for Stan
Winston on various stuff. Including a Michael Jackson video.
Fernando Mosquiera(Lagi) went back to
Maryland (or was it Maine?) to live with his mother and actually appeared on
several news stories there. If you remember, he was taking steroids for his
medical condition. Since he was legally on medicated marijuana, he joined a
group to 'reach out' about legalizing it. With court hearings to boot. He was a
good guy.
Jay Puryear (Kid Fan) is still messing
around in the gaming industry last time I heard. As for what company or
position, I have no idea.
Jacob (one of the designers as well
back in the day) went to work for a game company. I think it was either Eidos
or Activision. I remember him coming to GF to plug a game he was working on,
and Puryear and I nearly had a heart attack when he came in. Small world.
Matt Taylor (yes he worked at GF at one
time and did the Mortal Kombat guide.) He went on and started Versus Books. Pretty
successfully I might add.
Casey Lowe and Ryan Lockheart (Takuhi
and Orion) worked with Matt Taylor at Versus with Nick for some time. I was
actually going to work with Matt as well, but the ass flaked on me. He just
wanted the dirt on GameFan.
Nick Des Barres (Nick Rox) went on and
did various stuff. Including winning the design contest for the Resident Evil movie
poster. I even got an e-mail from him asking to put an entry in. It's no wonder
Nick won. He was a talented designer as well.
Kelly (K. Lee). Oh man. He went on to
work at EGM way back in the day. Read on to find out what happened.
Dan Jevons (Knightmare) went to work at
Conspiracy Games. I forgot what role he had in the company. He came by GF a few
times.
Bryn Williams (The Guvnor) is working
at GameSpy. Still there AFAIK.
Micheal Hobbs (Substance D) is working
at PLAY magazine.
Now for the old school stories. Woot! [Smile]
Jay Boor: Masshole.
I remember back when GF Online was one
of those places where you can hang out and see what 'new' thing Levi got in his
e-mail or new 'name' someone got plastered with. I remember walking up front
where Melissa was one day and seeing if I got any mail. I was talking to Elaine
when I noticed she was kinda spacing out towards the window as if she was
trying to see something in the parking lot.
Fast forward about 7 hours.
Jay and I are talking about some crap
when he tells me he'll be back in about 10 minutes. Thinking nothing of it, I
went to get a soda from the fridge in the kitchen cause it was fucking hot. I
hear Melissa and Elaine with their "OMG!" and "WTF!" voices.
Jay is laughing his ass off (well trying not to - you know Jay), and trying to
cover his ass about something he obviously did. I ask Melissa what happened,
and she gives me this stern face. Uh oh. Jay already hit a nerve and was in
trouble.
I found out that he left his girlfriend
in the car (yes, that long!) in the heat, and acted like he did nothing wrong. WTF!
I asked him WHY he left his girlfriend in the car for over seven hours, and he
just said... "It's embarassing enough that I walk around in public with
her. Why the fuck would I want to bring her inside?" I busted out in
laughter and I knew that was so wrong. But I later found out that she was just
a really shy person and was comfortably sleeping in the car the whole time
becuase she was tired. Still. Funny shit though.
Kelly (K. Lee): Tyrone Biggums?
Where should I start? I know it's
messed up to make fun of someone who's life got completely messed up, but you
can't help to bring this one up during the old GF reminiscence sessions. Now
this guy was an oreo cookie. Black on the outside but whiter than most white
people I know, inside. This actually strings on to Nick's antics.
He appearantly got addicted to meth
sometime during the first time I quit (or what people called a Wakabout). One
of the first things he asked me when I came back was "Hey dude, good to
see you back! Umm, can I ask you something later?"
WTF?
Anyways, later I'm alone and he asks me
"Hey. Umm.... Can... You get some crystal meth? You know... for a friend
of mine..." Who the fuck is he kidding? I told him I can, but I'm not
gonna bring it to work. That was the last time he ever brought it up with me. Yeah.
Like those pawn shop reciepts on your desk for over 400 dollars in jewelry was
because you had no money for food right?
Well, I recall him getting fired at GF
for something (the reson eludes me). Time goes on and a few years later we all
hear he's doing awesome at EGM. They paid for his moving expenses, got him a
company credit card, and was actually making a decent amount of money (he had a
baby to raise as well). It's quiet for a while, and then we hear this shit.
Appearently, his addiction followed him
all the way up north. He ran up the company credit card on crazy shit (probably
pawned it on stuff for you know what), lost his house and his wife ran off with
his crack dealer. With the baby. Talk about messed up. >_<
Nick Des Barres (Nick Rox): Shup foo! Recognize!
OK. I think Nick was actually a really
cool person. Once you really get to know him, he's a really nice guy. I just
can't believe all of the shit people gave him. Anyway.
Nick was notoriously known for speaking
like a black person (full ebonics!) with lines from 2Pac. He told me it was
because his school was 98% black people, and it rubbed off on him. I knew where
he was going to school as well, and I can totally agree. So sometimes during
the delirium from crunch time, we would do stupid shit to give us that extra
steam we needed to go on. This was one of those things. This was actually the
birth of the famous "2 skoops!" line (StreetFighter double fireball
super reference in ebonics. Yes, it's rasin bran pun.)
Now Kelly heard around the office that
Nick did an impressive 'black person' imitation, and he wanted so bad, to hear
it. But of couse Nick wasn't about to bust out with it in front of Kelly. Umm. Yes,
he's black. That would be a bit awkward, no? Everytime Nick would go into this
mode, Kelly would always miss it. Unless we triggered it, of course, Hehe.
One day, I was talking to Nick and I
see Kelly in the corner of my eye. We were standing there (I think Casey and
Ryan we there as well) and I busted out with "Wassupwiddat?!" then
Nick just went awol. He was going off on ebonics and waving his hands like the
gangsta he is for about 10 minutes. The whole time he was doing this, Kelly was
standing behind him. Listening. I couldn't take it anymore and started laughing.
Nick turned around and turned white as a ghost, then turned red from embarassment.
He stood there shocked for about a few seconds and said "Uhhh. Hey Kelly..."
and ran off into his office and slammed his door behind him.
Needless to say Kelly was very
impressed with his impression. After all, he was much 'blacker' than Kelly ever
will be, ROFL!
Writing a book would would freaking
rock. But it'll be pretty damn long cause of all the shit that went down at
good 'ol GameFan. I've seen the shadier side of it all for some reason. Things
that people either don't know or have forgotten about. Like when I got the
whole day off at GameFan because Andy Fell wanted me to "escort" him
to the bank to withdraw 30,000 dollars cash. WTF?
Or how about the time when we weren't
getting paid for 3 months at a time and people higher up on the payroll list
were cashing it before us peons could? I remember when Halverson got into Jay's
office to steal his and Julie's paycheck so they could cash them ahead of us. When
he was confronted about it, his words were "I don't care. Throw another
body on the fire for all I care."
Hey Shidoshi. Remember the guy
downstairs from GameFan that would have a heart attack because we would run down
those stairs and all of his shit would fall off the wall? Or how about the time
when Griffon was "living" at GameFan for about a month before you
guys decided to get an apartment? Damn. Good times.
Good to see Terry and Tim adding to the
memories as well. I'm sure Halverson liked the E.Storm in the wheelchair issue.
I recall that was the time around E3 and that was the "news" when you
guys got back. Classic. I'm not even going to get into detail about the whole
Firepuss or "I fucked Joe" incident. Hehe.
Tim - I'm not sure if you remember, but
I went up with Kei to Weising's house to meet up with you guys about adding his
section in your mag. Don't know if you remember or not. I was sleeping on his
couch the whole time after I got there. I'm all for resurrecting a mag. That
sounds like a freaking awesome idea! I was doing layouts in GameFan for a good 5+
years or so. Not my best work, you know how them GF crunchtimes were. Shoot me
an e-mail and let's hook up sometime.
Damn. I remeber when we were all having
a meeting in Jay's office about what was going on one day. His office was
practically all window, overlooking the parking lot. We were all sitting there
when all of a sudden, a guy in a tow truck came to repossess my car. It was
pretty embarassing. So I run out to see what's going on, and Bergstein run out
a few seconds after I do, and tries to tell the guy to leave the car here and
in return he'll pay for the whole thing upfront. I remember him clearly looking
me in the eye and telling me, "Don't worry. I'll take care of it." as
the guy drove off with my car in tow.
It kind of sucks about Elaine. She
stayed with us pretty much till the end. I remember we had a meeting right
after she literally walked out after finding out the Bergstein had no intention
of paying her back for her investment. Puryear just wanted us to know that her
leaving would have no ill effect on us, so we had a damage control meeting
afterwards.
I promptly left soon after. I just
couldn't take the shit there anymore. I even got a call from one of the Human
Resources chick we dealt with from express.com call me at home asking why I
left. I remember going back to the office to get my stuff I left behind and the
only ones in the office was Jay Puryear and Brian Olshever. Brian was quick to
tell me that express.com closed down GameFan, and actually had the sheriffs
come down and escort everyone out much like the U.S. Marshall incident.
Don't even ask me about (deleted his
name for my safety, lol). Bergstein's personal assistant. This guy could get a
mob to whack a guy if he wanted. Drugs? He only supplied some of the staff with
their needs when they wanted it. Shady indeed. I'm pretty confident to say that
over half of the staff including our Human Resources guy, Conrad, was a reefer
head. I've seen and smoked out with them as well back in the day. Heck, even
Nick Rox was toking at one time.
Well I think that should be enough to
add for now.
Take it easy guys! Good to see you're
all doing good.
==========
Fausty
Quote Originally Posted by Shidoshi
I think Ryan really disliked the stress of
having to find new and interesting content on a daily basis
Oops, sorry about that - didn't mean to
leave all that stress with you. But yeah, you're right, having only one or two
people run a "major" site is a tad insane. It was fun at first (scanning
Famitsu and ripping on Next Generation Online's mistakes), but when Berg
started demanding updates before 6 and I was put into a role with helping Rau,
I sorta lost it. I know I drove you a little crazy at times, and I don't really
remember if you hated me or not - if you did, I apologize. Heh, I blame the
madness that was working at GF.
===============
Shidoshi
Oh... good times. Two more show up, and we
get to look at that comic again. I never knew this thread would be so much fun
when I started it.
I don't have the time for decent replies
now, so I'll save those for later.
=====
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite
Issue Two...
BTW, who the fuck was the Blowmeister
supposed to be?
Wow... that was hilarious to see all that
shit again. I had forgoten a lot of that...
So at first the Blowmeister was just the
embodiment of all that was bad video games- an amalgom of all the suits who
wanted to make a quick buck and put out shit games, like Chester Cheeto etc... then
at one point a rivalry broke out with GF and EGM and it was an easy swap from
Blow Meister (B.M.) to Blow Meister Games (BMG) then finally BGM. Something
like that...
==========
kdeselms
Even though there are a number of ex-GF
staff members who post on my forum, we rarely talk about the GameFan days
anymore - so it's kind of a trip now that we've all got some distance on those
years, to talk about this stuff and reminisce. A lot of stuff, you just can't
fully appreciate the weirdness unless you were there for it. GameFan was, by
far, the most unique work experience I've ever had and by far, the most diverse
group of personalities. Even before working there, I knew a lot of the guys who
had been. Dan Granett had been writing for me on a site I'd been doing. I met
that guy on Prodigy, back in the day - I remember putting in a good word with
Jody to try and help him get hired at GameFan. Dan was just sort of a unique
personality. I've never known a bigger or more knowledgable pro wrestling fan,
either. Ryan was another guy I'd met on Prodigy's message boards, the three of
us posted there all the time. I can remember visiting Jody at the GF office in
Agoura one year while at E3 and watching Nick rant and rave about some other
magazine stealing GameFan's screen shots. I was never a big Nick Rox or Dave
Halverson fan, personally. I loved the spirit of GameFan but I couldn't stand
their writing. To this day, I pick up Play and think, "Wow, this would be
a good magazine, if I could actually read it."
I know from Dan's stories that Dave H. would
actually take everyone's copy and "Blissify" it - that's something
that just infuriated Dan. He took his writing very seriously and every time it
got copy-edited by Dave, it ended up being peppered with those patented Nick
Rox-isms that he loved so much.
===========
kdeselms
There was one issue we went to E3 with,
with Street Fighter on the cover I believe - the cover was of much heavier
cardstock than usual and if memory serves, they only basically printed enough
to send to subscribers and have some for E3, it never hit the newsstands. I'm
not sure if that's the missing issue, but it's a rare one. The cover was yellow
I think...can't remember, I gave Waka all the issues from my time at the mag so
he could scan them for work samples for his portfolio.
==========
isamu
Quote Originally Posted by kdeselms
Dan was just sort of a unique personality. I've
never known a bigger or more knowledgable pro wrestling fan, either.
I know from Dan's stories that Dave H. would
actually take everyone's copy and "Blissify" it - that's something
that just infuriated Dan. He took his writing very seriously and every time it
got copy-edited by Dave, it ended up being peppered with those patented Nick
Rox-isms that he loved so much.
I can personally attest to this. It's too
bad his relationship with GF ended on a sour note. But I miss the little guy
nonetheless.
=============
djpubba
Hey, good to see you around Waka.
I'll add in a little of what I know to the
where are they now's.
Quote Originally Posted by Waka
OMG.
Bruce Stockert (Reubus) went back to North Dakota.
For what? I have no clue. I guess I would since there was practically nothing
left after GF imploded.
Bruce went to work with Jody Seltzer doing
guide work for Prima. Things slowed down for Jody at one point so Bruce moved
back to CA and helped us make the SMT: Nocturne and Phantom Brave guides. After
those gigs were up we ran out of stuff to have him work on, so he's looking for
work last I heard.
Quote Originally Posted by Waka
George (former GF designer that started the
mag with Tim back in the day) was working at Atari last I heard.
After G left GF he got a job at SCEA, later
left there, started a dev house called Player 1, developed a game called
Robotron X and five or six other games for Midway and Crave, which didn't take
off. So now he's back at SCEA doing game design again. Sounds like he's doing
pretty good there. George is, like, my best friend in the world. Went to high
school with him.
Quote Originally Posted by Waka
Jay Puryear (Kid Fan) is still messing
around in the gaming industry last time I heard. As for what company or
position, I have no idea.
I bumped into him in the hallway at E3. He
gave me his card that's from a company that appears to be developing some VR
goggles or something.
Quote Originally Posted by Waka
Matt Taylor (yes he worked at GF at one
time and did the Mortal Kombat guide.) He went on and started Versus Books. Pretty
successfully I might add.
OMFG. I got an email a few years ago from
Matt announcing that he was leaving the game industry completely to dedicate
his life to helping children, and was changing his name to Matt Love to show
his love for children. Shortly after than, Versus Books went out of business. WTFLOLOMG.
===========
kdeselms
Quote Originally Posted by djpubba
I bumped into him in the hallway at E3. He
gave me his card that's from a company that appears to be developing some VR
goggles or something.
I ran into him a couple years ago, he was
working with some technology conference to try and get game companies to buy
booth space at that convention, or something. Olshever was still in ad sales, I
think working for a car magazine...trying to sell ads to game companies. I got
the feeling Jay was still trying to settle on a path, post-GameFan. Don't know
about the last couple of years, I wasn't at E3 last year - for the first time
ever. Strangely, I didn't really miss it...
===========
JesusisGod
Interesting to read everyone's viewpoints
on how Gamefan was. I see things a little differently then most since I was on
drugs most of the time while working there, thanks to certain people @ Gamefan
who introduced me to drugs. I am just glad that those days are over. I have had
enough back-stabbing and lying to last me 10 lifetimes after working there.
Andrew Cockburn
============
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite
Hey Wolfie- how did the process of creating
the pics of the editors work?
Well it kinda varied at how much Halverson
liked you or respected you. The guys he thought were cool he let them kind of
have free reign, Like Dan Jevens charater Knightmare (one of my favorites). Then
there were the people he liked to make fun of so he would dictate to me to make
them look "broken" or stupid etc... (Poor Nick)
In the case of the Postmeister, Dave just
came to me with the name and I thought that was just the greatest name and
quickly scribbled out this freakish postman thing, with the goggles etc... He
loved it and the character kind of evolved into this maddman persona based on
how the character was designed.
==========
Fausty
Quote Originally Posted by JesusisGod
Interesting to read everyone's viewpoints
on how Gamefan was. I see things a little differently then most since I was on
drugs most of the time while working there
Andrew! Um, Respect! Glad to see you're
still alive - it's been a long, long while. How's life? Still competitive in
SFA2?
========
Wolfie
Dude! What's up Andrew? How are ya what ya
been doing?
===========
JesusisGod (Andrew Cockburn)
Quote Originally Posted by Fausty
Andrew! Um, Respect! Glad to see you're
still alive - it's been a long, long while. How's life? Still competitive in
SFA2?
Life is great. I still play games, but only
the best ones. I really do not care about SFA2 anymore. It is still my favorite
fighting game ever made, but I prefer to play Halo PC online. I am good at that
now. I just work, workout, spend time with my wife, play videogames, and study
the Bible. That is my life right now.
Quote Originally Posted by Wolfie
Dude! What's up Andrew? How are ya what ya
been doing?
Life is very good now Terry. I am glad that
you are doing so well.
========
Wolfie
Hey Wakka! What's up, man? Boy, this is
like a reunion! There are just tons more stories left aren't there?
Quote Originally Posted by JesusisGod
Life is great.
Dude! I'm glad you're doing so well. Seems
like you've really turned your life around. Sounds like you're really happy!
========
bahn
Good to see ya again Kevin (all of you
actually) and hear that things are going well.
Perhaps Geogre, Rick, Jay and Eric will pop
up next?
======
kdeselms
Yeah dude, I've sorta just kept to my own
little forum community over the past year or so...my activity in gaming has
died down quite a bit in recent years and so I haven't found myself checking
out the game sites much, anymore. The guys on my board keep me up to date, and
a couple of them visit this board frequently as well, so that's how I heard
about this thread...which is probably the coolest one I've read on a message
board in a long, long time, with all the reunions going on. Plus the potential
for something to come of it is even more interesting, with Tim's desire to do a
new publication of some kind.
Plus it's just cool, seeing what a profound
impact GameFan had on many people, both good and bad. It wasn't a magazine that
was well-respected by its peers, to say the least...but I think it's clear that
the memory of GameFan and the enthusiasm behind it will outlast MOST of these
sterile, "gaming journalist" magazines. Where are the lengthy threads
memorializing Next Generation?
========
Waka
OMG! Andrew?!
Last time I saw you, I bumped into you at
Fry's in Canoga Park. After that incident, I told a few guys at work that I saw
you and chatted with you for a while, but their reactions weren't exactly what
I expected. You must have rubbed them the wrong way or something because the
crap that flew out of their mouths were.... damn...
Good to see you're doing good though!
Folks, this is a guy who used to dump
crates of porn on his lawn for the trash guy to pick up only for it to get
ravaged by the local neighborhood kiddies, lol.
Tim - Robotron X! That's it! I remember him
coming to GF to plug it. It was actually a very cool remake of the old school
game. God. I still remember Bruce playing the shit out of that game till the
wee hours in the morning at our house.
Do any of you remember when I fell asleep
downstairs in the "Dungeon" one time during crunch time? Damn Puryear
taped my head to the table. It wasn't just a piece of scotch tape. It was that
plus a whole roll of duct tape. He then promptly proceeded to make an alarming
sound and scream "Waka!" I woke up so fast and moved that whole
rubbermaid desk. My head bounced off that table like, 5 times.
Kinda funny, though.
Damn! Speaking of tape, does anyone have
any Tapeman pictures? I think Halverson was the only one that had it. I could
be wrong though.
========
djpubba
Quote Originally Posted by Waka
Tim - Robotron X! That's it! I remember him
coming to GF to plug it. It was actually a very cool remake of the old school
game.
Yup. That game never got the props it
deserved, although the camera was flawed. They should fix that and resurrect it
on the PSP. It's the perfect type of game for a portable.
I emailed George a link to this thread so
maybe he'll show up and give us a story or two.
BTW, Waka, your email's blocked so I PM'd
you instead.
========
=====
Waka
Quote Originally Posted by Shidoshi
No no. Chief Hambleton was... God damn, the
name isn't coming to me of course... but it wasn't Gary. Gary pretty much did
design, and never had a real character in the magazine.
David Hodgson = Chief Hambleton
Gary didn't want a character because he thought
it was childish and whatnot. So he opted out. The brit invasion at GameFan was
pretty intense. Lots of creative writing and design stuff all over the place.
=======
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Fausty
Oops, sorry about that - didn't mean to
leave all that stress with you.
Ryan! Nice to hear from you again. Back
then, I had a bit of ill feelings towards you. But you know, all of these years
later, looking back at things... a lot of us were pretty young, we were working
at what was probably our all-time dream job, and then you add in all of the
crap that went wrong with the situation... it was just such an unhealthy
situation in so many ways. It indeed was madness. I don't hold bad feelings for
anybody anymore, and what I most regret is that people just didn't really know
each other better and gel more to create an even better magazine. All of the
stupid personal conflicts and spats and whatnot are all in the past, and I'd
hope that now any of us could meet up and be cool with each other.
Well, except, I'll never forgive you for
making me re-type the press releases we got in via fax or mail. Lord almighty
that drove me insane. *laughs*
Quote Originally Posted by Waka
Hey Shidoshi. Remember the guy downstairs
from GameFan that would have a heart attack because we would run down those
stairs and all of his shit would fall off the wall? Or how about the time when
Griffon was "living" at GameFan for about a month before you guys
decided to get an apartment? Damn. Good times.
Waka! Heh... weren't we actually banned
from using one of the sets of stairs because of it driving that guy nuts? I
can't imagine what he put up with having to work under a group like us. I
actually don't remember Griffen living out of GameFan, but it doesn't surprise
me. When I got there, he was staying at the hotel down by the apartment we
ended up getting. I think we lived there for like a month. *heh*
I was actually going to post about your car
being repo'd. *hehe* That was such a crazy day. We were there, having that
meeting, and then somebody is like, "Hey Waka, isn't that your vehicle
being towed?" and Waka went running out the room screaming, "Noooo!"
*grin*
Oh, and Waka's girl (at least, girl back
then, don't know what has happened since then) was hot. Well, okay... I don't
exactly remember what she looked like. But she was Japanese, so she was hot. *laughs*
Quote Originally Posted by Kevin
There was one issue we went to E3 with,
with Street Fighter on the cover I believe - the cover was of much heavier
cardstock than usual and if memory serves, they only basically printed enough
to send to subscribers and have some for E3, it never hit the newsstands.
Are you sure? I would swear that the Soul
Reaver issue was the one that was pretty much E3 only. At least, I remember
that being another hard to get issue. Damn... I'll have to check to make sure
that I have that one.
Quote Originally Posted by JesusisGod
Interesting to read everyone's viewpoints
on how Gamefan was.
Hot damn... Andrew! I haven't seen or heard
from you in ages. I'm glad to see that everything seems to be going okay for
you. Were you crazy enough to marry another Japanese girl? *grin* Unfortunately
for me, I haven't learned my lesson about them yet.
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite
Also, did each editor get to pick their
name, or was that assigned as well?
I know that Dave had a name already picked
out for me - "Eggbert." I came in shortly before the deadline for an
issue, and while the art for my character was in place, the name wasn't. So
Greg Rau - he was a really great guy, BTW - came to me and asked me what I
wanted to use for a name. (I'm not sure he was supposed to do this or not.) I
told him I wanted to use the Shidoshi. And, actually, I had been using the
nickname since like 1989.
===========
kdeselms
Oh, and Waka's girl (at least, girl back
then, don't know what has happened since then) was hot.
Actually, if you're talking about Akari...he
married her
Waka, what issue was that Street Fighter
cover that we only printed a handful of, for giving away at E3 and stuff? It
was the year we had the motor home out in the parking lot and had the grilled
sandwiches and stuff, by invite only? That was the first E3 I was with GameFan,
stuck in the friggin' Kentia Hall cubicle. The Catered Cubicle, because guys
had to bring me food. I remember being in there with Fury and Dango, when some
dudes showed up with a bunch of issues they wanted signed. I thought that was
the funniest thing ever.
=============
JesusisGod (Andrew)
I use to be full of myself back then. Remember,
I started working for Dave the day I turned 16 (November 28th, 1990), and by
working with him I turned into a copy of him. My dad committed suicide when I
was two years old and I was always looking for a father figure. Too bad I
dropped out of High School to go work with Dave 24/7 and become like him. That
is why I was such an evil person. It has taken God about four years to get
those evil personalities out of my character. So, of course people from Gamefan
might not like me. Back then I only thought about getting money for weed, sex,
and more sex. Videogames were thrown out the window when I brought over my ex-wife
from Japan. That was one of the biggest mistakes I made. It changed me into a
person that I hated. I wanted to leave her but because of the weed and
attachment, I never could. I lost almost all of my home friends because of that
relationship, so it is no wonder people did not like me. I did not even like me
I married a woman that I had known for
quite sometime. It turns out that she is the perfect partner for me. She loves
Jesus, videogames, animals, food, people, family, computers, web-design,
traveling, and me. With my ex-wife, the only things we had in common were sex
and weed. Since I really did not understand Japanese very well and the same for
her with English, the relationship would become hell once we smoked weed. No
one would understand what the other was saying. This went on for years until
she cheated on me with one or two of her coworkers. I was never sure, but I am
glad we got divorced.
Never marry just for one out of the three
possible connections: the physical. You need @ least two out of the three for
it to work; Mental, Physical, or Spiritual.
=======
Waka
Quote Originally Posted by kdeselms
Actually, if you're talking about Akari...he
married her
I can't remember for the life of me. Those
were so hard to get, that I didn't even get one. Not sure if it was even in the
stack you gave me.
Yeah. Akari has been through with me thick
and thin. I feel bad that it's not exactly the way we wanted to live our lives.
But hell. If anyone sticks through you during the GameFan shit, then I suppose
you should marry them, no?
Funny story. I remeber back when they had
the CES in Las Vegas. I was sitting there with our booth model, Christen. We
were just talking when some asshole storms up to me all drunk with a GameFan in
his hand with the page open in the sports section in question. He was pointing
furiously at the page and cussing me out. "This is politically incorrect! This
is bullshit! Who wrote this piece of shit?" I just looked at him and said "Why
the fuck are you yelling at me? You got a fucking problem, then go talk to
whoever wrote it. I'm not here to listen to your shit!" He stood there for
a minute then walked away, sobbing. Then Christen looked at me and said "Ummm.
Is that normal?" We both laughed for about 10 minutes. We couldn't even
hand out the mags after that.
========
Shidoshi
Another small story of Shidoshi getting
himself in trouble. I was working on an issue of AnimeFan, and decided that I
was going to review the live action Weather Woman movie. I reviewed it, tossed
in the screenshots, the section was finished, and I sent it on to GameFan. A
few days later, I get a call or an IM (can't remember which) from Waka, saying,
"Dude, you're in serious trouble." When I asked why, he said that the
higher ups were pissed off that I was trying to put porn into the magazine. I
had no idea what he was talking about. What it was was, I had taken a
screenshot of the scene that was used as the DVD's cover - the main character
lifting her skirt to show her panties. (Which looked like nothing more than a
typical bikini bottom.)
What really cracked me up about that was
that in a recent issue, that had used artwork of the chick from Pandemonium 2
totally topless, with her hands covering just enough to get away with it. I
thought it was funny that that was perfectly fine, but a small screengrab of a
girl flashing a pair of non-revealing panties wasn't. (I know, she was a real
person, versus a render... but still.)
=========
djpubba
Well, if you go by the number of people who
want to help make it happen, it's looking pretty good. We've got a private
message board set up to collaborate on this thing and 34 people signed up to do
it so far, 6 of which are former GameFan folks and we even have a former EGM'er
who might help.
The ex-GF folk on board to help so far
include me, Wolfie (who's more up for it than I thought, yay!), Waka, Shidoshi,
Weising, HiFi, and one surprise bonus member who I can't name yet.
We still need more experienced reviewers
and editors to make it work, though. Any of you ex GMR/XBN/GameStar folks
interested?
===========
Waka
Quote Originally Posted by Jetman
That sounds pretty funny. I would love to
pull that off on one of my drunk friends. I hope you got Jay back for that one.
Oh I did. I cocked my arm back like I was
gonna sock him, and he flailed his arms up to cover his face. Which was even
more funny because of the situtation.
Yeah, it was me that called you Eric. Basically,
we were looking through the issue before we sent it off and Jay saw it. They
don't call him "The Hatchet" for nothing. I personally had no problem
with you doing your AnimeFan. If you recall, I called you again because I was
told to work with you on redesigning it. Don't know why, but I enjoyed having
at least one section of the mag I could read on white pages without having to
squint or go color blind.
=========
djpubba
More story... nothing mind melting, just a
little funny...
The printing on issue one wasn't that great.
We printed it at my old job, which used pretty low quality presses and we used
too high of a line screen for that type of press. So it was really dark in
spots. So we needed to find a real printer. It just so happened that Andy
Fell's brother in law, or cousin, or some relative like that, owned a printing
company called Wolfer Printing. So Andy hooked us up to get the magazine
printed there. Back then, we used to go on what were called "press checks."
This was where one or two of us would go to the printer while the magazine was
printing and make sure the pages coming off the press were good. It was a hell
of a long drive away, so none of us wanted to go because, since they printed in
the middle of the night, it basically meant sleeping in their waiting room
until the press dude came in to wake your ass up and look at the next set of
pages (a sig). It was a crap thing.
So when we'd get the magazines back from
the printer, Halverson would always look at every page in the magazine and find
some thing wrong and get all pissed off and insult whoever went on press checks.
It was always fairly minor stuff -- stuff that happens in every magazine, like
misregistration, blues going purple, etc. Finally he got so fed up with
printing problems, he decided he was going on a press check himself. So he
loaded up a shitload of game systems in the car to hook up to the crappy TV in
the waiting room and we head down to Wolfer printing. Of course nobody thought
to bring a fucking RF modulator to hook them to the crappy old TV so we're
bored out of our skulls by the time the press dude calls us out to look at the
first sig. Halverson picks up a sheet and rubs it between his fingers, holds it
up to the light and starts freaking out. He's going off that he's paying for 80
lb paper and this is fucking 70 lb paper and he's not paying for this crap. I'm
standing there thinking, "no fucking way he can tell the difference
between goddamn 80 lb paper and 70 lb paper with his fat fucking fingers."
So the press dude hauls out a micrometer and measures the paper. Sure e-fucking
nuff old microdigits Halvy caught 'em red handed trying to stiff us on the
paper weight. He was the living press check god for a while after that (and
more power to him).
Funny thing, at our DoubleJump Publishing
offices here in Valencia, CA (different place, way far from where we did press
checks), like, 13 years after that, we get mail addressed to Wolfer Printing. They
occupied the same suite as us some time in the past. It's usually from the
employment board or the IRS. Go figure.
===========
djpubba
JesisGod quote
You weren't too drugged out when I worked
with you. You were a genuine, enthusiastic teenager doing typical fucked up
teenager things, loving games and fun to hang out with. Glad you survived it.
=========
Shidoshi
By the way... I had no idea you had
anything to do with DoubleJump up until today. Major props. I own not one of
your strategy guides (as I own not one of the games you've done), but damn they
are hot.
I still remember finding and purchasing
issue #3 at the local mall video game shop. The magazine was just so different
than anything else out there, and the screenshots were just insane. I remember
these shots for the second Mickey Mouse platformer for Genesis where like only
two shots fit onto a page because they were so huge. It was like they weren't
just screenshots from a game, they were art or something. Also, the entire mag
just had this feel, this vibe that no other game mag had. It wasn't these
writers talking down to me, it was like a friend saying, "Hey, seriously,
check this game out."
GameFan was one of the few mags I ever
subscribed to. Every time an issue came in the mail, all I did that night was
sit around and read it front to back.
==========
djpubba
Oh crap, that reminds me of the little
story about those. It was way late in the wee hours of deadline eve and
everyone had crashed before the magazine was done except me and I think it was
Greg Off. We had one last damn page to fill and nobody awake to help us fill it
with something. So we looked at each other and both said at the same time, "Mega-shots!"
and blew up those two shots big enough to take up the whole page, and went to
sleep on the floor
=========
djpubba
Quote Originally Posted by IronPlant
Thicker paper means less content. Dave
planning that out would not surprise me in the least.
Naw, Dave wasn't like that. He'd work like
a dog non-stop to fill as many pages as he could get the printer to extend him
the credit to pay for. The problem was that he wouldn't let anyone else do
anything until he was good and ready to dole out the assignments like moses
coming down the mountain. So we'd get jack shit done for two weeks of the month
then kill ourselves trying to cram all the work into the next two. We seriously
nearly killed people working like that. I remember staying up for 5 days
straight to make a deadline then catching a cold on the last day and my brain
feeling like a piece of rock.
==========
kdeselms
I don't know how they could get pissed
about that, considering the shots of DOA Hardcore I took that you used in the
mag, Waka...I seem to remember a particularly tasty (and totally purposeful) shot
I grabbed of Kasumi delivering her powerbomb move on Ayane...you know, the one
where she lingers in that special place for just a little longer than maybe is
appropriate? As I recall, it got used in both the layout AND the TOC...hahaha...
=======
BonusKun
Quote Originally Posted by Compass
Somebody track down ECM and get his ass in
here. What is he, too good for us? I can see why Halvy wouldn't pop in but this
thread is bursting with fans of ECM's more than anyone else's ('cept maybe Nick).
No. I just don't think he wants to deal
with this anymore. After the whole mess with GG happened a lot of people hated
him for that last post he made on the old GG boards.
Do you honestly think some people *Master
for example* are going to let it go?
Back on track tho. I actually got the nerve
to bust open my old storage case of Gamefans. Volume 1. Issue 3. Feature Story
of Battletoads. Dear god.
~BonusKun
========
Typefiend
Thanks to a kind email, I was directed to
this forum where I could revisit the fond and frustrating memories of working at
both DieHard GameFan and Gamers' Republic. Its a trip to see some of the names
of people whom I got to work with for a short while...basically the last 6
months of the Halverson era GF, before I joined Gary, Bryn, Hoagy, Gerald,
Jeremy, Ryan, Jun, Jevons, Hobbs, Griffin, Corby, and Halverson to launch GR. I
had almost banished the memories of Metropooplis: Bouncing Checks Inc, and its
all come back in vivid detail. But I remember people like Waka, Rau,Rustin,
Jody, Terry, Bruce, ECM, Shidoshi, Nick and Andrew....it was my first job outta
college, hired by a great first boss (Gary Harrod), and a dream job at that (graphic
designer). Well, at least until the paychecks stopped and all we did as staff
was play hours upons hours of Poy Poy and Command & Conquer. I only regret
that I left just as I was about to get my own character in the masthead...Terry
was going to make me a pretty keen panda bear character. But alas, it was never
meant to be.
Hope all you original GF/GR kids are doing
well!
=========
Typefiend
Quote Originally Posted by Dragonmaster
Dyne
so you were the "6th man" or
whatever the last couple issues?
To be honest, I was the whole damn team in
terms of design production after a couple months there because the other
designers had stopped working out of anger due to late paychecks. I was so
yippy-skippy about working, I tackled a lot of the shit games layouts, and just
soldiered thru for awhile. But after a few months of not getting paid, there I
was alongside everyone else playing WarCraft or taking 2 hour lunches...
==========
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Dragonmaster
Dyne
wasnt real. i have the Turok issue and it
isnt there. it had to be PS'd in.
It is so totally there. I'm not saying it
was intential on our part, but I can see it clear as day.
[posts regard the word "sex" in a
dinosaur's nostril on the Turok cover]
=======
djpubba
quote regarding new guy on new mag
Nope. It's Greg Off. Greg has agreed to be
the Editor in Chief. Also, since Greg is the original designer, IP owner and
copyright holder of Monitaur, he brings us Monitaur as a character we can use. With
Terry fully on board as our main art man, and several of the other old GF crew
on board, this is really going to be fun.
It took forever for me to get an account on
Gaming-Age, too.
=======
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by Shidoshi
No no. Chief Hambleton was... God damn, the
name isn't coming to me of course... but it wasn't Gary. Gary pretty much did
design, and never had a real character in the magazine.
Mike Hoggson I believe was his name. Very
cool guy and was pals with Gary Harrod. Both Brits
=========
Akumachan
Quote Originally Posted by Wolfie
There's a few of us on here but only a
couple from issue one on: me, djpubba (Tim Lindquist), JesusisGod (enquirer
aka, andrew cockburn). Shidoshi was later...
wow... I didnt go through even a quarter of
the shit you guys went through, but I'd like to think that I kinda understand
your pain. These stories are unbelievable, yet TOTALLY believeable where Dave
is concerned.
and those pics from the early 90's of Dave =
HI-larious.
and for anyone who hopes he has changed... It
speaks highly of you as humans to give Dave that much benefit of the doubt. but
its greatly misplaced. The stories of the end of GF so much mirror the end of
GR that it makes me shudder.
and Play.. well that remains to be seen I
suppose. I should give Brady a call and see how he is doing.
[REGARDING SONIC STATUE BOUGHT WITH STOLEN
PAYROLL MONEY WHICH IS THE ENW OFFICE]
You mean its still there?! That is
rightfully mine!!! I will have it!!!
It sure is. Its a little battle damaged now.
(one of Sonic's spikes is broken) But he and Knuckles are still holding down
the entryway to the Play offices.
A covert-ops mission may be needed to
recover Sonic.
=========
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by djpubba
The problem was that he wouldn't let anyone
else do anything until he was good and ready to dole out the assignments like
moses coming down the mountain.
I can remembr that shit. The new games
would come in and that's all he would for like three weeks is play them and
then hand out assignments in the last week like every issue. Then the printing
would be delayed and they'd start tacking on these late fees and holdover
charges. The print bills became astronomical! GF was never able to catch back
up with that. Dave's solution? Stiff the printer on the bill and go find a new
one..! Well I think the burned through 3 printers like that before pretty soon,
no one would take GF's print orders as its reputation preceeeded itself...
Little off-track there, heh. But after the
crunch-Hell-week, everyone would take like a week off to recover and the whole
process would start all over again. Its amazing that the mag was ever put out
at all! I usually was spared the agony of the crunch week cuz of my situation.
.. I needed x amount of time to paint covers, and characters etc... I got
caught up in a few snaffus tho. I'll go into those later.
======
Akumachan
Quote Originally Posted by Dragonmaster
Dyne
ive wrote to Hobbs on a number of occasions
and every reply was a genuine, taking time out to answer reply. seems like a
pretty decent guy to me.
Yup Hobbs is really a nice guy. Very
sincere. I was surprised when he went from underpaid reviewer to seriously
underpaid lead design for Play.
Quote Originally Posted by Wolfie
I can remembr that shit. The new games
would come in and that's all he would for like three weeks is play them and
then hand out assignments in the last week like every issue.
well well well... it's like deja vu all
over again....
That's exactly the way GameRrepublic and
Play ran.
frankly Im astounded anyone will print his
magazine....
Im not sure I ever saw an issue of GR or
Play on time. ever.
=======
Akumachan
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite
Where's the Play office located?
a sleepy little high end suburb of Los
Angeles called Agoura Hills.... only minutes from the old GR offices.
Quote regarding Dave being sick
LOL, awesome... he still uses that
particular trick.
And he still has Julie do his dirty work. But
now it's her job to give people his excuses.
=======
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Wolfie
Geoff Higgons needs to get in here (El Nino).
Man he could string together the mullet monologue better than anyone!
He's probably too scared to come in here...
he still has my SE Army of Darkness DVD that he was supposed to get signed by
Bruce Campbel and never did. About four years later now, and the bastard still
hasn't sent it back to me. *heh*
=========
djpubba
Quote Originally Posted by Mike
I still want to know the address of the old
place on Ventura Blvd in Tarzana, just to see what's there now and if they
still have the disk door.
18612 Ventura Blvd., Tarzana, CA 91356
=========
Shidoshi
Hobbs, Griffin, and Jevons were my best
friends during my time at GF. All three of them were awesome, great guys, very
dedicated and passionate about what they were doing, and all ready to put in
the work to make the best magazine they could. I've always thought that if I
had the money to make my own magazine, those three would be the first I'd go
looking for to fill staff positions.
======
djpubba
Quote Originally Posted by Mike
But are you guys seriously thinking of
starting a new mag?
Heel yea. The current name is Hardcore
Gamer Magazine, but Three Foot Sonic f'ing rules.
======
djpubba
Quote Originally Posted by JefmcC
I had a friend that met The Mullet at E3
many years ago. This was the first time I heard of his being an a-hole. Any
truth to this?
Not when I knew him. He was your friend and
best buddy to your face and called you worthless and insulted you to others
when you weren't there.
========
djpubba
Quote Originally Posted by Dragonmaster
Dyne
seriously tho, anything with hardcore just
makes it sound like you're trying too hard.
If DieHard was good for GameFan, Hardcore
is okay for us. The only reason they stopped using the name DieHard in their
title later on is because Sears threatened them. For real.
What I don't like about Hardcore Gamer is
that it sounds a little elitist. However, unless something better comes along,
it's probably what we're going with.
=======
Akumachan
Quote Originally Posted by djpubba
Not when I knew him. He was your friend and
best buddy to your face and called you worthless and insulted you to others
when you weren't there.
co-sign.
you dont know how many times i listened to
it at the Play offices. Friendly up front, but as soon as the person was gone,
the shittalking started.
========
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by Mzo
Prepare the ninja shirts!
Hee hee, and they all know how insane I am.
When I first started working at gamefan I had this big plack Chevy truck where
I cut a hole in the grill and mounted a big red skull that had lights in the
eyes that were wired into the blinkers. People kinda thought I was a little nuts.
======
Typefiend
At least you're not going to name your
magazine "Gamezilla" as Halverson wanted when we launched Gamers'
Republic. The whole staff basically vetoed every suggestion from Dave....thank
goodness!
Core Gamer?
=========
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Akumachan
and for anyone who hopes he has changed... It
speaks highly of you as humans to give Dave that much benefit of the doubt. but
its greatly misplaced. The stories of the end of GF so much mirror the end of
GR that it makes me shudder.
Here's my thing... I look back through my
life at who I was, the things that I've done, and the mistakes that I've made. As
I've gotten older, I've changed, I've mellowed on a lot of things, I'm not the
same person that I used to be. Did Dave do some things that I thought were
really screwed up back when we both worked at GameFan? Absolutely. But I also
did some damn stupid stuff myself.
I also know how easy it is to form an
opinion on somebody based on pieces of information gained from here or there. There
are so many opinions floating around about me that it's crazy. I look at what's
been said about me, look at all of the misconceptions that various people have
about me, and it forces me to rethink the way I look at other people. Don't get
me wrong, I'm not some wonderful guy who doesn't dislike anybody and has all
this inner peace and all of that crap... I've just learned how easy it can be
to get the wrong impression of a person.
Don't take this to say that I think
everybody who has a beef with Dave is wrong or whatever. Everybody is entitled
to their opinions, and I didn't live in their shoes. Like I said, my experience
of him hasn't always been best, but at the same time, I didn't have really
direct dealing with him most of the time. What is done is done, and just as
I've become a very different person since that point, I'm also willing to
believe that he has as well until I'm proven otherwise.
============
Akumachan
I salute you then Shidoshi. If you can feel
that way, then you are an honorable human being indeed. And Im not being
facetious.
In earlier years, i used to hear a lot of
crap about Dave, but then i could never figure out why people felt that way. Needless
to say that all of that has changed now.
I can admit that, of course, not all the
times I had were bad times either. In many ways, I can even thank Dave for
giving me much needed industry experience. But, IMO, it doesnt change the
things that he did do to people that were not so nice.
I suppose Im just disappointed in the
amount of politics in a line of work where many of us do this out of love for
games.
And i can also understand your point about
being misunderstood. i have shaped my opinions based pretty much on my own
direct dealings with Dave. It just disturbs me to see so many people offer
similar situations.
but thanks for the great thread Shidoshi
===========
Wolfie
Ok, to finish off the GF '93 Las Vegas CES
show trip... So there were lots of shenanigans going on as you might guess and
it the excitement quickly wore off for me. So I went down to the cassino and
started playing roulette. I actually turned $20 into $90 so I thought well, not
really much use for me to be here anyway (I'm not a PR guy or an editor...), so
I buy a plane ticket to get back home a couple days early. (The group of us had
driven out there). So I get my bags together and I go "oh shit! I cant
carry this on the plane!" So when Jay puryear got back to the room I go, "um
Jay, do you think I can give you something to take back for me" and had
him a small blue bag. He was like, "uh... what is it, Tee?"
I say, "Well dont tell anyone, but um...
its a gun." Jay: "A gun?! Are you nuts?! What the Hell did you bring
a gun for?!" I dunno, long car trips thru the dessert I always packed heat
back then. LOL, more likely I had seen too many movies... So of course Jay told
everyone back at the office about and for the next several months heard lots of
entertaing comments: "Hey T, you packing?" "Sup, gangster?"
"hey, don't shoot" . Hee hee
==========
djpubba
Trivia: Dave Siller came up with the
GameFan name.
(The Aero the Acrobat guy)
=============
Corebee
Yo locs... It's Jeremy... good to see
everyone is still alive... Fuckin trip down memory lane reading these stories. Spent
a good 3-4 years of my life in Halver-Land and glad to have escaped with my
sanity. Still gotta be thankful to the guy, had it not been for him I would
have never had the chance to discover graphic design... I would probably still
be out vandalizing shit...
Happy 2005
HardCorebee
Oh yeah Terry... of the story you told
about the check cashing... I was actually the guy who got the last of the funds
that day... sorry
==========
Wolfie
Hmm, so who are you? I'm glad my pain made
you laugh.
==========
Corebee
i was the guy who ran away to japan with
andrew in 92... me, gerald, and andrew were all good friends in jr. high. gerald
and i worked with jody handling the strategy guides
=========
djpubba
Okay, I guess it's time for the story of
how I left GameFan.
I already mentioned that in the beginning,
I had taken a percentage ownership of the magazine in lieu of a paycheck. When
I agreed to this, Dave told me that Andy would draw up the proper paperwork and
get that to me -- not to worry. A couple months went by and that paperwork
didn't show up. When I'd ask Dave about it he would say that Andy was just busy
and he needed lawyers to handle it and all that, so it was a slow process -- but
not to worry. This repeated every couple of months. So when the "Three Foot
Sonic" incident happened, which was about 12 months after I was promised
those papers, I really started thinking about what was going on there. I wrote
down what I had heard from various people about who got how much percentage of
the magazine for their investments or participation and good damn if it didn't
add up to more than 100%. Dave had promised away more percentage of the
magazine than there was to give, by a margin significantly larger than the
margin of error!
So soon after that I asked Dave about the
papers again and got the same story, but this time they were real close to
being ready. The next day, I decided to call Andy myself and ask just what was
the holdup with my ownership papers. I got him on the phone and he was like "huh?
WTF are you talking about? Dave never said anything to me about you owning
anything. There aint nothing left for you to own." So I thanked him
politely and immediately called Dave. When he answered, I exploded into an
outburst of unintelligible gibbersh punctuated by pauses to suck the drool back
in my mouth. My wife came and stood next to me and urged me to think about what
I was saying. So I repeated to Dave what I had just said in English -- that I
had just spoken to Andy and told him what he said, and he replied, "What?
You're not allowed to call Andy! Only I can talk to Andy!" I was so taken
aback by his complete disconnect from reality, I just told him that I'd be
there in the morning and hung up.
So the next morning when I got to work, I
went straight into his office, which he shared with Dave Winding at the time
and when I walked in, he looked up at me like a deer caught in headlights. I
sat down and stared at him for a minute. Nobody said a word. Then I calmly said
that I was resigning, and he had two options for how I would leave. He could
pay me a reasonable figure for my share of the magazine and I would stay and
help him finish the issue and then train a replacement for myself, or I would
leave right then and he could rot. Winding still didn't make a peep. It was
deadline time and they'd have been royally screwed if I left, with George being
the only other one left to do all the layouts. So he took the smart choice,
agreed to pay for my share and I stayed long enough to train Jacob Riskin to
replace me. Once I was paid off and I felt a *little* better about things, I
then also agreed to freelance for while after that to help with the magazine. That
lasted about 4 issues until I just kinda slowly faded out of there.
I think I was probably the only one who
ever got anything out of their ownership of GameFan.
=========
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Corebee
who all from gamefan is posting in here? I
can only tell who a few people are... enlighten me please
Oh shit... if you are who I think you are. Colby?
And yeah, we really need to put together a
listing of who is who in here.
=========
Shidoshi
I'm not sure I've ever showed this to
anybody... but this is from the "lost" issue of AnimeFan, the one
that was being produced for the issue of GameFan that was canned when the mag
closed down. The issue was set to introduce a new look for the section, that of
course then never came to be. The section itself wasn't finished, which is why
some of the text doesn't make sense with what it is paired up with. As well,
there six pages in total, but the rest of the pages weren't as finished as the
first two were.
Anyhow... here you go.
animefan.pdf
========
Corebee
Quote Originally Posted by Shidoshi
Oh shit... if you are who I think you are. Colby?
its jeremy... sup dude
none of the readers here would recoginize
me, i didnt write for the mag... put plenty of sweatshop-esque hours in for
halverson though
spanked nick rox on the sfIII machine more
than a few times muahaha
dam... the golden years
y'all should call your mag 1UP... jeah
========
FuSoYa
Quote Originally Posted by Lyte Edge
Apologies if this was already covered and I
missed it within the pages of this thread, but does anyone remember the "Monkey
Boy Rox" home page, which covered the Working Designs/Gamefan incident of
when Victor Ireland discovered that Nick Rox had not played through the WD Sega
CD RPGs he was reviewing?
In late, but I remember that. Wow. Isn't
there a 'way back' internet web machine for that kind of thing? Anyway, it
wasn't that Rox wasn't playing through WD's games, it was Lunar 2 in particular.
He played the Japanese version of Lunar 2 but supposedly he only had time to
finish half of WD's U.S. release before the mag went to print. (talks of the
game crashing near deadline after an exahausting 18 hour RPG fest come to mind).
I could dig for the print outs of the
usenet transgressions, (usenet archive might have it) but Vic really went wild
for a number of reasons. One, Nick didn't finish the U.S. version, and no
defense from GF was given on this point, as Nick had called WD for hints on how
to beat Borgan. Two, he didn't know enough Japanese to make substantial
comments about the translation quality. Some drama ensued, Vic offered Japanese
tests for Nick, Dave defended him and refused, and it was an amazing conflict at
the time.
=========
kdeselms
It's been kind of a combination of "old
school" and "new school" GameFan.
So far (In order of appearance):
Eric Patterson (Shidoshi)
Matt Van Stone (Kodomo)
Tim Lindquist (King Fausto)
Kevin Deselms (Hi-Fi/Posty)
Terry Wolfinger
Mike Wakamatsu (Waka)
Ryan Lockhart (Orion)
Andrew Cockburn (Enquirer)
Thomas Puha (Riot)
Gregory Han
Jeremy Corby (Core)
========
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Corebee
its jeremy... sup dude
none of the readers here would recoginize
me, i didnt write for the mag
I wonder if my bad memories of names made
me remember your last name wrong, or if I've been mistaken since the beginning.
*heh*
It's odd, because the first memory that
comes to mind about you is sitting around with you, Gerald, and a few others on
the GF Books side, and you guys were screwing around with the GameBoy camera
and printer.
=========
Wolfie
There was one sort of upside to not getting
paid at GameFan- a lot of us got really good at playing Command and Conquer! No
money that day..? Well no production either. Just 8 hours of C&C and
warcraft. Good times.
========
Typefiend
Yeah except Gary was a big crybaby when he
was losing, and Geoff Higgins was ultimately the first to die in every
multiplayer RTS game. But yeah, those were damn fun times....
========
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Soundwave
I assume everyone on staff had side jobs to
cover the expense of, ya know, living? I could't survive on my savings for
months at a time.
Hahahaha... no. No side jobs, at least for
most of us.
===========
Wolfie
I had some side work... the most I ever
went I think was a month...
Gary was the biggest Crybaby ever!!! And
greg rau would always shoot you as you tried to ally with him.
=======
K Lee COMMENTARY
http://www.ga-forum.com/showthread.php?t=30650
[THE THREAD DIED AS WAS NOT ARCHIVED ON
WAYBACK - WE HAVE NO IDEA WHAT HE SAID.
BASED ON SUBSEQUENT TNL POSTS, K Lee
RESPONDED WITH ANGER, AND ACCUSATIONS OF BEING MIS-REPRESENTED.
THE THREAD ALSO SEEMED TO SPILL ONTO A
NEOGAF FORUM THREAD]
==========
djpubba
I agree we should stop talking about HGM
here and go back to GameFan stories.
The way I remember Kelly is he had more
integrity than half of the old GameFan staff combined and the people who messed
with him and disrespected him back then suck.
========
Cowdisease
Now the drama continues in the GAF thread. OMG,
Crossover!
Quote Originally Posted by djpubba from the
GAF thread
Hey Kelly, it's Tim Lindquist! Good to see
you around.
Yeah, I heard that wife running away with
the drug dealer story, long, long ago. I never imagined you would get into
drugs. You were one of the nicest, politest and honest people I ever worked
with and Dave and others treating you with such disrespect is part of what
helped foster my dislike for them.
==========
djpubba
I have a feeling Reubus will be showing up
here soon, he just emailed me asking for the link.
Hi Bruce!
=======
Shidoshi
Any ex-GF people who show up over there
should be made fun of mercilessly on here until they show up and post. Then, we
can tell them how much we love them.
=====
djpubba
LOL! "I really loved you Dave
Halverson."
Speaking seriously, while many of the
people at GameFan did some wacky shit worthy of making legendary, everyone was
good at the core. None were as genuinely evil as Halverson.
=====
Chief Hambleton
The Chief Hambleton 0.000002 cents
Hello everyone.
Sorry I didn't hear about this thread
earlier.
(apologies if anything is repeated -- I'm
only on page 8)
This is David Hodgson. I was "Chief
Hambleton" on the mag between 96-98, when I left to form Lamers' Republic.
I have to say, now that all the water has passed under the bridge, that GameFan
magazine, despite the sheer insanity of it all, was the BEST time I've had in
this industry. Now then, I've a few matters to clear up.
1. I harbor no ill-will toward ECM. I don't
speak to him, and ironically, we both freelance for the same company (Prima),
but he is the ONLY person I've ever had a stand-up row with. THis was after
ECTS 97 when I came back to find him hired without my knowledge. I won't go
into details (water under the bridge), but the argument was fun.
2. Not as fun as the time one of the art
directors fought with Cockburn and slammed him up against the wall. Here's some
stories I remember (sorry if they're repeated). Shidoshi, let me know if you
would like to know more:
3. Capcom lawyers and "bernie".
4. Cockburn screenshot fellatio and Rare's
Blast Corps.
5. Police cordoning Cockburn's Honda.
6. Megafan. The debacle.
7. Living with Reubus and Waka.
8. GameFan Books.
9. Riding shotgun with Wolfinger.
10. Drew Barrymore arriving.
11. Brandon Lee's Monitaur dummy.
I could go on. But I won't.
And if there's any perceived ill-will
towards anyone, there isn't from my perspective. I patched things up with Dave
Halverson last E3, and I hope to do the same with ECM this year.
Cheers
David Hodgson
AKA Chief Hambleton (Postmeister on
occasion)
EDIT: I'm reworking the list, so that only
the stories I witnessed first-hand are there. Especially as the last days for
us were tough, and I don't want to revisit stuff that's just heresay. Andrew C --
glad you've turned your life around, and good luck to everyone I worked with.
Soppy guff? Correct.
=========
Soundwave
Quote Originally Posted by k.Lee
AOK, that shit actually did happen
What can I say....I am alot older and a
little wiser now
P.S. the hooker's name was Simone
===============
Typefiend
Quote Originally Posted by JefmcC
Can we still refer to Halverson as "The
Mullet"?
Internally he was known as ten-ninety (10%
in front, 90% in the back), I believe after the release of the snowboarding
game 1080.
One of my favourite Halverson moment was
when we went into the supply closet where he stored some of his personal
collection of games, toys, memorabilia where we found a CD from 80's new wave
hair travesty Kajagoogoo. When confronted with his choice in music, he went
into full denial mode, almost seeming angry that someone would claim it was his.
Of course later he admitted to owning it.
In retrospect, Dave could be either
seemingly the nicest man or a complete liar depending on mood or situation; I
believe its in his nature to be both. He was personally pretty nice with me
until the very end of my days at Gamers Republic, where he freaked out when
everyone started to leave en masse because we weren't getting paid like in the
GF days all over again (most went to Computec, I went to Imagine Media). I
basically lost all respect for him when I witnessed his sexist and bigot side
when we hired an asian woman to help production design. Now I can look back at
him with forgiveness and just hope his team at PLAY are being treated well.
All I can say is that the people at GameFan
and Gamers that I worked with day to day were very dedicated, passionate, and
completely insane. It was amazing fun with those first two magazines.
========
Wolfie
Ok, I was just reminded of a story...
So yeah, we'd go weeks at a time without
getting paid as you all know by now. So we would all get called into the
conference room for our monthly pep talk and morale boost. So Dave Bergstien is
yappin' about how he knows its tough and we'll all pull thru, yadda yadda, but
there's been some theft around the office and that has to stop... He lists off
a few items and then says "...and a fax machine thats worth about $1200."
So I instantly perk up "$1200 hmmmm?" Well ya see, its the fax
machine I still use to this day. Awww...
=========
djpubba
I've been teetering on whether I should
post this because I don't remember some of the details clearly. Plus it just
makes my stomach turn to think of how Greg must have felt.
Early in the life of the magazine, Dave
invited a guy to come work on the staff who had been working at Prima writing
strategy guides. He did the official guide for Sonic 2. His name was Tom
Stratton. Tom lived in the San Francisco area, so he needed a place to stay to
come work at GameFan. Greg Off offered to let him crash at his place until he
could find his own place. At the time, Greg was working at GameClub taking and
shipping orders, while writing for the magazine. There was always a little bit
of a power struggle going on with Greg versus Andrew, Kei and Mas. Apparently,
after a couple of weeks at the magazine, Tom decided to take sides and he went
with the majority and turned on Greg. Tom went to Dave and told him that Greg
had been stealing from GameClub and had amassed a collection of loot in his
apartment that belonged to GameClub. Dave freaked out and told Tom to give him
Greg's apartment key, which he gave to his girlfriend Julie and told her to
take *I forget who she took with her* to go get the stuff from Greg's place. So
the pair went to Greg's apartment and emptied it. They came back to GameClub
later with two big boxes filled with every one of Greg's earthly possessions. Then
Dave and *like, two or three other people, I forget who*, proceeded to pick
through all his stuff and take whatever they wanted for themselves. When Greg
came back and saw what was going on, he was, of course, floored. Most of the
stuff was rightfully his possessions and included some things he valued very
much.
He admitted that he sometimes took games
home but he felt that this was something that was understood as a perk of the
job and that the vast majority of the stuff they had taken from his house was
rightfully his. He felt that he was part of the "family" and since he
routinely worked more hours than he got paid for, put his heart into the
business, was treated like Dave's best friend and saw Dave do this himself, it
was understood to be okay. It was like two friends sharing a pack of cigarettes
(or a prostitute in Las Vegas).
When the dust cleared and everyone had
their words, since, like everyone else there, Greg really wanted to be a part
of the magazine he took it in stride and went on working there, still putting
his best effort into making the magazine succeed.
*Edits: Reflecting on this, I probably
shouldn't have said that Andrew and Kei were involved in taking Greg's stuff
because my recollection on who was involved isn't that clear and if I'm
mistaken and one of them was innocent, that wouldn't be right. I definitely
remember Dave and Julie's part in it and that Tom was the one who betrayed Greg.
I don't remember if Tom had anything to do with taking Greg's stuff either.
==========
djpubba
Quote Originally Posted by Jetman
Did you guys eventually give him back his
stuff or what?
I didn't touch any of it.
I think he took what was left in the boxes.
I don't know if he got anything else back or not.
==========
bahn
Wow, Tom Stratton?!? I remember him from
Golin Harris, West Coast division (now at THQ these days). That's some crazy
shit.
======
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by djpubba
I definitely remember Dave and Julie's part
in it and that Tom was the one who betrayed Greg. I don't remember if Tom had
anything to do with taking Greg's stuff either.
Yeah, there was a lot of ugliness that went
down there. Usually I wasn't around when the shit came down. I was married at
the time and I'd come in, do my work, put in my 8 hours, and go home. I was
also kinda crammed into this corner of the room with my drawing table, airbrush
and compressor, facemask on oblivious to a lot of the shit that went down. Except
for Dave and Julie's stupid dog, Puggles. That thing would come right into my
area at least once a day and lay the nastiest shits right on the carpet! Hated
that dog! Then I'd go get Julie and make her clean it up and all she would do
was pick most of the mes up with a paper towel and not use any cleaner. I swear
they must've feed that dog bacon grease cuz the would be just this huge stain
that I would then drench with windex (thats all they had) just to kill the odor...
Dave and Julie just thought that was the funniest thing tho. "oh, Puggles
just likes you."
Heh... I guess I was around when the shit
came down lol
=========
Typefiend
Quote Originally Posted by Wolfie
Is this Dango-Head? Greg?
Hola, its Gregory, your former cubicle
neighbor for all of 5-6 months at the tailend of the 1090 GF years Hahaha,
after all these years I can still remember us laughing in unison watching
Higgin's lone engineer or motorcycle scouring the map in the hope of a crate
when we played C&C. Do you remember how my tactic was to create a bazillion
motorcycles and just overrun Gary until we could hear him curse across the
office? I still remember when I got in early one day early the GF offices (when
most of us had 11am start times) and changed everyone's Mac desktop with Rau's
face photoshopped onto some fella getting a delivery in the rear. Man, those
memories are cracking me up as I type it.
==========
Typefiend
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite
How exactly did he freak out? I mean, what
did he expect his staff to do if they weren't getting paid? How many walked out
at once? Details, buddy.
What did he do to her? Did he call her a
little jap bastard?
"Freak out" meaning literally
freaking out, running around shouting profane accusations about anyone and
everyone, all the while waving his arms, and once even charging at me while I
was on the phone with one of my former coworkers who had already left/quit. I
think 5-6 people intially left, as they got good offers from a larger
publishing company. I left soon afterward to art direct the Official Sega
Dreamcast Magazine (that was a whole drama in itself). People were jumping ship
like crazy, and those who stayed were very disgruntled. Daily closed door meetings
where most of the time we were discussing how much we hated Dave's lies about
how things were going so well (really, he could have earned out trust and
respect much more if he simply shared the bad news in an honest manner, but he
always too the route of masking the truth, thus the ill will back then).
In terms of the racist/sexist attitude, all
I will say is that he basically made working at GR hell for this young lady and
on her last day(unbeknowst to her) laid into her so badly she came out shaking,
crying and later furious (she was actually thinking of litigation at one point).
On a lighter note, I remember when someone
installed a Mac extension (during the OS 9 days) onto his machine which would
allow us to make popup system dialogue boxes come up onto his desktop at our
whim. We spent quite a while sending his popups warning about "incorrect
binary trap error -06" or some other bullshit error, and then slowly
changing them into more personal and strange "warnings" about "gay
anime porn files exceed storage capacity. reboot". I'll give Dave that
credit...he allowed us kids to be kids.
========
Reubus
This thread is hilarious. So many GF'ers,
so many stories. I was only back in North Dakota for a year, then Wyoming (!!!),
then Denver, working for Jody. Been back out here for about 7 months now! It's
great to hear what so many of you have been up to. Shidoshi, Wolfie, Waka,
djpubba, Hoagie, MVS, Deselms, Ryan, Cockburn (!), Han, Corby, how the hell you
all doing?
You guys miss DH as much as me? LOL
I've got many happy memories of GF, and a
few not-so-good ones (you reading this, Jevons? Heh...). Now, if only ECM would
step up and post. And I mean that literally. He'd have to step up just to reach
his damn keyboard.
Oh, and Tim, I told you I was in for the
new mag thing months ago!!! And I'm not on your list of those currently
interested! Hook me up with the info!! =]-~
It'd also be great if K.Lee, Dangohead,
Eggo, Fury, or Nick showed up! Cripes, we should all go drinking, that'd be a
blast (though not till it stops raining; that's no fun on a motorcycle).
==========
LOST VIDEO FILE
http://www.got-next.com/staff/gfohollywood.mpeg
=============
Reubus
One story that comes to mind that made me
laugh harder than I think I've EVER laughed in my life was the day someone (I
think it was Greg Han) brought in some Dave's Insanity Sauce. (For those not
familiar with this stuff, the back label says you can also use it strip cement
floors!) After a bunch of guys chimed in their "holy shit that stuff is
hot" type of comments, Andrew (Enquirer) Cockburn told us we were all
pussies, and only a mexican like he knew what hot was. Anyway, long story
short, we gave him enough crap that eventually he downed about a shot's worth
of that stuff - STRAIGHT! And he was fine - for about 5 seconds! Then his face
turned beet red, he started coughin' and sputtering, doubling over; God it was
funny! Sorry, AC, but that was funny shit!
Needless to say, he spent the next couple
hours in the bathroom, drinking water and puking, drinking water and puking,
drinking water and puking, drinking water and puking, drinking water and
puking, drinking water and puking, etc. while the rest of us were in tears
laughing so hard.
RESPECT!
========
Typefiend
Holy shite, that was indeed a really funny
moment. I remember all of us, including myself, were very careful and
conservative with the Insanity Sauce. But Andrew drank shot full! Initially he
was giving us all the cocky thumbsup pose, like it wasn't no big deal. I think
it was roughly 30 seconds after he swallowed that the effects of the habanero
peppers kicked in, and he looked like Linda Blair in the Exorcist. Tears of a
clown, Smokey Robinson style.
Funny thing is that Rustin Lee had no
problems with the sauce. He was eating it like it was just plain salsa.
=========
Wolfie
Oh God! I was totally gonna post something
about that! That was the fucking funniest thing ever. "Will you pussies
shut the fuck up if I drink this?", he says in typical Cockburn swagger. I
remember us all saying, "oh yes!!" That look on his face after
realizing what he had done... priceless!
======
djpubba
Another little story, nothing nasty or evil
this time...
I remember, slighty before the magazine started,
I was doing the Die Hard GameClub ads to run in EGM, I used to put my phone
number in tiny, tiny print in the ad to get more business doing other people's
ads. It said something like "ad designed by Mindset 555-1212" in,
like, 5 pt type. DieHard's number in the ad was nice and big and color, in like
24 pt type. Then Street Fighter 2 came out. I literally got 20 calls a day from
people wanting to order SF2 from DieHard but couldn't get through.
Soon after that I started full time on the
Magazine and nearly everyone there played SF2 all the time. It was the original
version where you couldn't control the bosses. One of the things I liked to do
was make cheats for games with the Action Reply. The SF2 players there were
always begging me to try to make a cheat to play the bosses. So I messed around
and messed around and I finally came up with a combination of 2 or 3 different
AR codes that let you control them, but with a different character's move set. So
you'd do Ken's fireball move and M.Bison's firey spinning forward superman
impression thingy would bust out. I was like a tiny god there for a while for
pulling that off.
========
kdeselms
The GameFan Network debacle rests entirely
in the lap of Express.Com, GF Online had absolutely zero to do with that and in
fact, we didn't really know anything was up with it until we started getting
harassing e-mails and saw the letters being published online. By that time, it
was the beginning of the end for all of us...the hatchet started falling soon
after. Of course, we were all given the command to issue "no comment"
to anything internal related to what was happening.
Besides, the happiness in that video faded
after about a week of being in Express.Com's offices...the vibe there was a
complete 180 from the GF offices and they started treating us like product
description writers...which is ultimately what they wanted from us, it turned
out. Incidentally, I do have that video on my website, along with a couple of
other rarities.
I can remember when they laid off everybody
but Rick and Levi, who remained to do product descriptions and keep the shell
of GFO alive...by that point, I had become completely belligerent about my
displeasure with working at that place. My desk was facing a walkway and the
head of the web operation would come up behind me, TOTALLY "Office Space"
style with the "Keviiinnn...what's happening..." I'd have my resume
open, surfing job sites, etc... I would routinely break the silence rule (they
didn't want other areas hearing what was happening in the "games area"
even though sound carried easily over the maze of cubicles) by playing metal. Other
guys from GFO can attest to how vocal I got. When they laid me off, they
commented that they'd never seen anyone so pleased to be given their walking
papers. They said I had to sign an NDA not to talk about internal strife or
anything related to the collapse, in exchange for two weeks severance - if I
didn't sign, I didn't get paid. Of course I signed...knowing it wouldn't be
long before I could talk freely. Sure enough, bankrupt within like, six months.
Another story was a meeting in which it was
revealed by Allison (ex-Variety writer, heading up Express.Com's web editorial
staff - including us) that basically, the promised video production department
wasn't happening and in fact, I should stop focusing on doing videos and do
more writing, preferably news stories which drew those crucial hits...I
explained that I'd given up running the site in anticipation of this new role
and now I'm left in a situation where I'm a copywriter. She looks at me
straight-faced and goes, "Well that sounds like a career issue to me."
Levi told me after the meeting, he saw the look on my face and my death-stare
at her and thought for sure he was going to see blood. That's when my
belligerent behavior began.
Bruce, good luck with the job search man! It's
tough being freelance - I've been doing it in post-production for the past
three years or more and am missing a full-time job now Get on a show, finish
the show, look for the next show while doing freelance work. Wish I could latch
onto a show that stays around for a while...but after American Candidate, I've
sworn off of reality TV. Working tonight on a Fox show called "Who's Your
Daddy?" Ugh...reality knows no shame.
=========
Wolfie
So here's another non malice story.
So I had been doing the airbrushed cover
for about 6 issues now, no easy feat since I wasn't allowed to scale the image
up at all, (you see we could only scan images so big as scanning them in halves
and then combining them in photoshop hadn't really been perfected yet or
something). As it was the covers had to be cleaned up in photoshop anyway to
get rid of dirt or fix the paint that had chipped etc... So I started watching
the process as Tim Linquist was doing clean up one day. He showed me how to use
the color dropper and I just thought it was the coolest thing. So I think on
the next cover he let me do the clean-up or at least talked me thru it. Then I
think by issue 7 I added some photoshop generated art into my airbrushed cover,
it was the one with Rock and Roll Racing on the cover. All I had done was some
shaded spheres that I scaled here and there and a bad KPT filter for the sky. I
still thought it kicked ass tho!
Then I noticed the little airbrush tool and
asked Tim if it worked like a real airbrush. He said yeah and showed me how it
worked. So I'm thinking this could be really good. After fucking around a bit
with that Tim and I convinced dave to let me try doing a whole cover on the
computer. It was the issue 8 Zombies Ate My Neighbors cover. It had Monitaur
protecting some kids from a giant baby and some other zombies. So all went
pretty smoothly, it wasn't perfect, but I was learning as I went and also using
a mouse (no wacom tablets back then!). So I show Dave and Jay and they point to
the giant baby and say "What's up with the flesh color on the baby? Why's
it grey? It looks dead." I look and I couldnt really tell and then had to
confess that I was massively color-blind. I explained that I could get by by
reading the color labels on my paint bottles etc... Jay thought that was the
funniest thing "a color-blind artist" and Dave I think felt like he
had been duped. Heh. I soon learned to always check the color picker to see
what color range I was in. So Tim I'd have to say is the one who was most
supportive of me going digital, and soon had my own Mac Quadra! LOL. Pretty
sweet at the time I'm told.
========
Dangohead
Wow… this is something really special
seeing all these GameFan alums like Waka and Wolfie (poor little Billy, Terry… he
never had a chance hanging on the wing of the plane) posting all the bad and
good memories.
Myself, I'm still heavily involved in the
video game industry working at Visual Concepts as a PR manager - 3 years to the
day now! But there are a couple times of the month where I think back to those
hard, but fond days back in Agoura Hills and later in Woodland Hills. It was in
Agoura Hills where I was hired on the spot by Chief Hambleton (AKA David
Hodgson) to work as a strategy editor for the short-lived MegaFan magazine… and
the birth of the aboMination known as Dangohead was willed into existence.
Stories? Well, there's plenty of stories
that have already been told on races to the bank for checks with no money, of
the management be it the early days of "The Mullet" to the late days
of Bergstein. A lot of the stories that have been told make GameFan seem like a
pretty morbid place… and to a certain extent, you really had to be really dumb,
really insane, or really passionate to work at GameFan. Personally, I was all
three: pretty dumb to leave college early to be overworked and underpaid,
really insane to keep working late hours and weekends 2-3 paychecks behind, and
of course, passionate that I'm actually working at my favorite video game
magazine. That's probably what got me through those nights of instant ramen and
cereal - that I was doing something I truly loved. And as some former GF member
commented already (I think it was Wolfie), we always figured somehow we would
pull through no matter how dire the situation became.
I do miss writing about the industry, even
though my writing was mediocre at best (as Hi-Fi and Eggo can definitely attest).
I do plenty of writing nowadays at my current job - just not any fun type of
writing. That's probably what I miss most - writing reviews for bad games. And
there was definitely a difference in writing a review for a bad game and
writing a GAMEFAN review for a bad game; it was always fun trying to figure out
new and fancy ways to describe "crap". Oh… that and trying to find
new ways to promote "VOOT". (SHAMELESS PLUG!)
Anyways, thanks for the trip down memory lane
and I hope all former GameFan members are doing well. Also, thanks to all those
GameFan readers who still remember the magazine; it's rare to find a group that
still remembers GameFan so fondly. I especially want to give an appreciative
thanks to the regulars at the GF_Tavern IRC channel as I've known most of the
guys on that channel for several years.
For all the crap that I had to deal with,
at least today I can look back on those days and laugh. And I think that
sentiment is echoed for the greater majority of the guys who worked on GameFan.
BONUS!
I've attached a scan of my first business
card... I actually found in a few days ago while cleaning up my desk area... which
was really odd since it's been several years since I've seen anything GameFan
related.
============
DHG Otaku
this is truly a great thread! Not a great
story, but on topic...waaay back when I had been talking a little to Nick Rox
and knew of Dan Jevons through a mutual friend who worked for the Euro Computer
and Video Games magazine. Nick and Dan had managed to get me an interview with
Halverson and Hodgeson. This was around the time Starfox 64 was out. What cool
offices I must say.
The night before the interview my friend
and I decided to drive up to GF at like 2 am and just check the place out. So
after arriving (my friend proceeds to take a piss on the side of the building) we
try the door and it's unlocked, we dare each other to go in and we do, awesome
blue carpets, cool looking place to work way in BFE though. Seriously, you guys
must have lived off that McDonalds and Dennys down the hill.
So the next day we're told to wait outside
until someone comes out to get me. Out comes Hodgeson (chief hambelton). I just
got such a kick out of seeing what the actual chararcters looked like...only
one I even recognized was Waka who looked EXACTLY like his bio pic. Jody
Seltzer was cursing someone out in the lobby with his check (now I know why) I
finally meet with Halverson and he looks nothing like E.Stomr OR Skid aside
from the mullet, who proceeds to kick his feet up on the table, call David
Perry the slut of gaming, riles my writing for a bit (admittedly it wasn't
great but not COMPLETE shite either) and laughs at my salary suggestion.
Back at this time Hodgeson himself wasn't
exactly the nicest guy either, but since running into him again at E3 this past
year he seems a completely different person, maybe being so close under Dave's
wing back then poisoned his mind or something...Shidoshi told me not to take
that shit personal. :P
Dan Jevons is a cool dude just don't piss
him off! That man seriously knows how to go off.
Andrew, what's up man! Send me an email
sometime! Glad to see so many ex-GFers posting here, this is some seriously good
shit. If I can recall any untold stories will post as well. Very cool you guys
are starting up a new mag project, I'll definitely be emailing those involved
about...getting involved! Sorry to go off on such a rant here!
========
Mina
Oh yeah, BonusKun did contact me weeks ago
to put together my part of the story to this. I keep forgetting. Anyway...
It was a long painful story and I wasn't
there when it started but I was there before it started to end. Dee and Junon
were the only one's there when it began to take a turn for shit alley.
Well it starts off with a montage of my
parents having unprotected sex and then raising me to become one of the most
electrifying personalities the internet has ever seen.
Well as few of you know, I (well many of us
on SZ) used to work with Fernando Mosquera (aka Lagi) on SegaNet before any of
this mess happened. We ran the experimental Media.SegaNet.com site that dealed
in Sega Oriented Media, but we also added in non-Sega stuff. This has become a
hit real quickly, it in fact became the biggest videogame MP3 site available at
that time, added with the fact that SegaNet was the biggest and baddest Sega
sites at the time as well (even SoA's Official site sent people to us for DC
news). I was always being told that networks were interested in looking to put
up SegaNet for their own. Even IGN had sent Junon email about wanting to suck
up media.seganet.com as their own media site. Instead we stayed with SegaNet
and let Lagi decide where it all takes us. At this time, we (SegaNet as a whole)
were affiliated with IGN as an external Sega site.
Then one day we were told that we would be
joining up with Gamers' Republic. I guess that sounded exciting at the time, so
we prepared for it by moving our stuff from the shared server with Gaming-Age
on to this new server. It took about a week for this process to take place but
something bad happened. I downloaded all the stuff from the server to my HD as
a backup to put on GR. Then my computer suffered a HD crash. Then the GA server
wiped our account out and I was left with nothing but all our unlinked MP3
files (which gladly to say was on another server). At this point I gave up the
site and left the net for a week. This is where the first blackout for me hits,
but from what I got from Junon, I can continue.
He and a few others rebuilt the site from
scratch in about 3 or so days. New design, new content, new everything. They
even gave it a new name, Chupamedia! Named for all the Media Leechers out there.
Anyway our site was back up and things seemed to be back to normal. I was still
kind of out since I needed to cool off from that big mishap that took place.
From what I gather everything was working
fine up to this point until the FTP account was suddenly not working...
Dee and Junon made all attempts to contact
Fernando by Email and or ICQ to find out what was going on, because none of
them could connect to the sites by FTP. They said for days they got nothing. So
they contacted someone at GR about this and it took another day or so to get a
response. They were contacted directly by someone named Dave Halverson and Dave
told them that Fernando had ditched everyone at GR, including us. And he was
saying all kinds of crap about Fernando, trying to convince us that Fernando
was the bad guy and that GR was not. Dee and Junon were a bit pissed to learn
Fernando had ditched us but also pissed that GR locked the FTP as a result. When
this took place, Junon, Lawd and Bathory registered a new domain name (Perfect-Zero)
and found hosting elsewhere. They just needed the content back from GR.
So they asked Dave, nicely, if we could
have our portion of the site back, it wouldn't hurt him or GR since we were
always different than SegaNet anyway and that without us, that site is useless
anyway. We've always done our own thing. Dave's response was to work for him on
GR running SegaNet first. This is when the hostage situation took place.
At this point many things went on at once:
1. I had returned only to find our site on
the brink of death, AGAIN! Ugh!
2. Junon was working Dave by submiting to
all his requests, to coax him into getting our site back.
3. Dee was designing a new site for Perfect-Zero.com
for our big switch, if in case it was needed.
So then there was another week long battle
trying to get our site back and Dave was not being helpful. Dave set up
proposition for us to get our site back. He wanted us to design a new SegaNet
site, and then to run it with the content he would give us. Although we didn't
design a new SegaNet site (the ex-SegaNet designer did), we put it together in
HTML and added in the news updater script to make it look and run like a real
site. Dave was so pleased to see it up in 2 days that he offered us all free
lifetime subscriptions to GR. As if we gave a fuckin' damn about his magazine. We
wanted the site back.
So then after we created a new site for
him, for SegaNet, we asked for our site back. He came up with another term. He
wanted us to populate the site with content, to bring it up to speed. Time
consuming, but we told him we wanted our site back first. Instead of giving us
the site back, he came up with yet ANOTHER term. He wanted us to relocate to
his offices (in L.A. right?) to work for him and then we'll have our site back.
We questioned this and then asked once more for our site back. After he stood
by his decision to hold the site hostage, to make us do all kinds of work on
SegaNet for him, he was later told to go fuck the whore he came out of and die.
2 things happened here.
1. Junon planted a .cgi script on this
server the day we moved to GR. This .cgi script pretty much gave anyone in the
world read/write access to the GR server, if someone got ahold of it. This
script was used to help us do Web Based file management since we were not given
Telnet access back then. In the wrong hands however, it could destroy the
entire server. Anyway, after we left GR for good, they had a web server down-time
for, about a week or so? From what we gather, it looked like the script got
into the wrong hands.
2. Our domain name Perfect-Zero.com had
just become active, Dee uploaded the new site design to it and with only 1 day
of downtime, we were back up. It so happens we came back up on 9.9.99, the
Dreamcast Launch day.
1 week later something happened. We were
contacted by Fernando from his spiffy new Gamefan.com email address. He told us
his side of the story and mentioned how he was moving from 1 company to
another, moved out of his apartment, and he was unable to get to us on time. He
said that GF offered us to join them, but the decision was that we had already
went through enough BS at this point and that we're doing this on our own. So
we declined the offer, whether or not it was a paying offer. After this we
parted ways and then history takes it's place.
==========
Shidoshi
Dango finally made it! Nice to see you
again.
And Bruce! Damn, nice to hear from you
again. Apart from our little posse (me, Jevons, Griffin, Hobbs), Bruce was
probably the person I was closest to friend wise. A really super guy, very down
to earth and level-headed even as everything at GF was going crazy. Always had
a crazy story, and was far too kind in giving me and Griffin rides to work. Man...
Bruce's cars. *heh* There was always an interesting story there. I still
remember heading home one night, getting pulled over by the cops, and being
searched. *heh*
Wolfie's mention of the fax machine brings
this to mind... any of the ex-staffers willing to admit to things that they
helped make "disappear" from the office? *heh*
I'll say that I had reason to feel guilty
when ECM was trying to figure out where the hell the NeoGeo MVS board had
gotten to. *heh* I also may or may not know where the office's two MAS NeoGeo
arcade sticks went to. *grin*
======
Reubus
Here's one for all the Nick Rox fans out
there...
I was working late night one night,
thinking everyone else had gone home. Round about 3 in the morning, I heard a
noise somewhere out in the office, so I went to check it out. As I came through
the doorway into the sort of snack room, adjacent to Nick And Casey's offices,
I saw Nick with a styrofoam cup in his hand. He didn't see me, so I just
watched this whole thing: He had some kind of thick liquid in this cup,
swirling it around (I asked him later what it was; turned out to be hot cocoa
mix, just with little water in it, so it'd be thick). He then pours some of
this goop on his right hand, smearing it over the whole palm side, picks up a
piece of typing paper with his left, holds the paper to the wall, and slams the
goop-covered palm onto it, smearing it downward as he draws it back. Then he
shakes his head, crumples it up, and does it AGAIN. After his second slam, I
just walked back to my office, shaking my head.
Next day, I dropped into his office,
intending to ask him what the hell he was doing, and what do I see on his
screen? His latest Resident Evil layout, with a small but incredibly realistic
looking bloody handprint contained therein. He had scanned his own chocolatey
handprint, made it blood red, and there it was! How dedicated is that? It was
awesome...
Yeah, I actually got pulled over 4 times in
the first month living in Thousand Oaks!!! Long hair and '66 Ford Galaxie (w/a
crushed rear panel) didn't seem to be the TO police's idea of an ideal resident!
LOL
========
Shidoshi
I remember one night when Griffin and I had
walked up to the mall (it was about a block and a half away from our apartment
complex) to see a movie. We were walking back - just walking on the sidewalk,
doing nothing more than talking - when a cop car drives up along side us and
shines his spotlight on us. He asks what we're doing, and we tell him we're
walking home. He gave us some smart remake, and drives off.
Thousand Oaks was a nice place to live,
because of how quiet it was, but I found it funny that it was so quiet that
even we were getting harrassed.
========
Reubus
Quote Originally Posted by Shidoshi
*heh*
On the Nick thing, no matter what people
may think of him, you simply cannot deny his layout skills.
I always liked Nick. Little strange, but
aren't we all? He's one of the most talented guys I've ever met, smart as all
hell, and a helluva layout artist. The only thing was, he had a tough time
getting things in on time cuz he was such an idealist as far as his own layouts
go.
Oh, and one night late, his dad came in to
pick him up, and he had the most incredible blonde with him. Musta been half
his age, but gorgeous!
=========
Riot
I was the Sixth Man a few times. In my
rubbish Ecco the Dolphin (Dreamcast) review and I think in the Red Dog review
as well. I remember ECM writing another piece on Red Dog was once it came out
in the US since we disagreed on it.
========
Chiblitz
Hey guys,
I don't know how I came upon the thread,
but I thought it was pretty interesting. I used to work for EGM and OPM (I'm
Kraig) until a couple years ago where I got into game development.
Anyhow, the one inaccuracy I saw here so
far is that GameFan was purchased by Ziff to be launched as a new magazine. This
isn't entirely correct.
Actually, Ziff bought GameFan (which was
very inexpensive) to grab its subscription base to help it bulk up against
GamePro, which was slightly in the lead at the time. It wasn't a huge sub base,
but it was a nice chunk of gamers to automatically give EGM a quick boost.
Kraig
==========
EvilLightsCK
Quote Originally Posted by Shidoshi
Dead, I believe. Can't remember if it was
suicide or not.
Last I checked, I hadn't committed suicide.
Nor died. I think the opaque/foreboding Postmeister info on the sad passing of
EvilLights (no space) was a joke. The abrupt departure was because I did a
little something called "resuming school" after summer break.
Maybe you're confusing me with Dan Gran(n)ett,
who worked there for a while before I arrived -- and whom Casey, Nick, Ryan,
Jason Cross and I first met when our teeny-selves booked a hotel room for the 1994
CES, where he'd been hot on our trail. He was killed in a car accident in one
of the hilly sectors of L.A. about two years ago.
Apologies if I'm repeating any information
that's already been given out. I'm only up to Page 6 of this very long thread;
Casey -- sorry, "Takuhi" -- gave me the link. I'm surprised so many
of these sacred stories are being bandied about on a public board -- certainly
they'd be better preserved for a book someday. But as the lid's off the
picklings, I'll add that everyone's favorite Japanese correspondent did indeed
masturbate his dachshund, by rubbing its scrotum when it was rolled over on its
back. He also once claimed to have been raped by a fat girl on the summit of a
hill in the Japanese countryside; he told us he was so ashamed of the contact
and disgusted by her fatness that after the act, he got hold of a pocket-knife
and scraped off the outer layer of his penis-skin.
craig.
=====
EvilLightsCK
People, people, people! If I say it once,
I'll say it twice (forty times maybe, as I'm only now on Page 7!) -- EvilLights
is alive and well and living in Pennsylvania. EvilLights was I, and "Stalker"
was Dan Gran(n)et(t). Whom I believe died in 2001 or 2002, not 1998 -- because
Nick was telling me that an armada of netizens were petitioning Kojima to
include a tribute to him on a dogtag or something in 'MGS2,' shortly before the
game was released -- as Dan G.'s 'MGS'-love was apparently legendary.
Kojima responded with the tribute of
silence.
craig.
=========
NRX (Nick Rox)
Greetings. Hello. Namaste.
This thread has -broken my mind-. I was
referred to it by former GameFan editor EvilLights (who was likewise referred
to it by former GameFan editor Takuhi, apparently) not six hours ago. It's
taken me that long to work my way through it, though it looks like it's died
down a bit in the last week or so.
I am the former Nick Rox. Nick Des Barres
is my Christian name. I am the offspring of character actor Michael Des Barres
and legendary "supergroupie" Pamela Des Barres. I was 15 years old
when I began at GameFan, and 18 (or 19?) years old when I left, circa 1997/8. My
memory is a bit hazy...perhaps as a result of the legendary Andrew Cockburn's
uberpowerful pot. No, I'm kidding. Maybe. (No hard feelings, though, AC,
respect!)
Working my way through this thread has been
quite an experience. I thought I had left this era of my life -thoroughly- behind
me. Indeed my final contact with any single GameFan staffer was over a year ago...mainly
due to my own negligence. I really should have kept in contact with ya'll.
(Please forgive my lack of respectable
English syntax and grammar...I haven't spoken the language for more than a few
sentences at a time in over a year. 4-real.)
My God, the names, the memories. Taking it
back to the origin...the true origin, at least personally, I'm talking '92, '93.
Takuhi, aka Manticore, aka Casey Loe. Orion, aka Ronin, aka Hawkeye, aka Ryan
Lockhart. EvilLights, aka Craig Keller. The Stalker, aka Adol, aka Dan Granett,
RIP. Songoku, aka Nick Rox, aka me. Yeah, don't give me crap about calling
myself "Songoku". I was kickin' it in '92 long years before 'Dragon
Ball' ever made its debut on these shores. We were just a bunch of teenagers
geeking out on Prodigy "UGs" about Japanese video games. It was truly
a meeting of the minds...dare I compare it to, say, pre-French Revolution
meetings between Robespierre, Marat, and Danton? Nah, that's just too damn
pretentious. Taking it to the GameFan era...AC, Shidoshi, Terry, Waka, Corby,
Hoagie, Reubus, et al (Even Tim, who I never met at GameFan, having joined the
enterprise long after he left, yet had the good fortune to work with on the
'Guilty Gear' manual and package which I designed post-GameFan). It's been a
real treat reminiscing with everyone, however vicariously.
A few notes, in no order whatsoever...I
wish I had a grand plan for this posting, but I don't:
'Street Fighter Alpha' and the notorious "blue
shadows": The video capture system for Sega Saturns at GameFan did not
allow for audio. As many of you are no doubt aware, setting the audio in the
Saturn version of 'SFA' to 'Original' enables arcade-perfect "super
shadows". I never did so, owing to the limitations of GameFan's screen
shot capture system. Was this an egregious error on my part as an ostensible "game
journalist"? Sho'nuff. Yet I humbly offer the preceding text as my excuse.
The 'Lunar 2' debacle? Yup. I didn't
complete Working Designs' translation of the game before reviewing it. Let's
face it; it's a really, -really- long game, and the monthly deadlines did not
behoove my finishing the English version before review. Not to mention the ill-advised
difficulty-tweaking WD inflicted on an already perfectly-balanced game (see the
Borgan battle). Nontheless, I stand by the statements I made a decade ago, when
I was still a teenager: Working Designs introduced countless superfluous "comedic"
elements to the game, not present in the Japanese original. As for challenges
made to my Japanese ability (or lack thereof), I retort most strenuously: I
began Japanese lessons at age 11, and have worked on the professional
translations of such games as 'Breath of Fire III', 'Valkyrie Profile', 'Guilty
Gear', 'Suikoden II' and the original 'Shadow Hearts' -- I am completely fluent
in Japanese and will be more than happy to prove it, should anyone decide to "challenge"
me. Heh. (An amusing aside: Working Designs, apparently stung by my review,
demanded a "test" of my Japanese skill at the very first E3. For
whatever reason this never happened.)
Regarding Dave Halverson. What's with all
the vitriol? My God. Did he have the Mullet To End All Mullets? You're damn
right. But guess what...so does Solid Snake. Were his people skills not quite
adequate? Is he a flawed human being? Sure. So am I. So are you. I guess you
could say I was one of his "favorites", so I may not have seen the
worst of him, but I'll tell you this about Dave Halverson: He loves video games.
He loves video game journalism. He may have got in way over his head, but he is
a genuine person. He and his wife Julie gave me my start in life and I am
hugely grateful to them for it. I'll hear no ill talk regarding Dave -- he
created GameFan, wrought it from the very ether, and without him this thread
would not exist. Everyone who talks shit about personal experience with him -- let's
face it, you wouldn't be where you are today without DH.
Insanity Sauce!! That day was -epic-. I
tried a -drop- of it on a nacho and it knocked me to the fricking pavement. AC
was truly a hero that day.
My Legendary Bloody Handprint in the RE
Saturn layout! That was indeed an inspired moment of design, though I'm not one
to toot my own horn (any and all ex-GF staffers out there, feel free to retort)!
I remember doing five or six hand-shmears until I got one that compared
favorably to the one in the game. Anyone who still has that issue, check it
out, and kneel before the might of Swiss Miss hot chocolate mix!
I doubt anyone really cares, but what have
I been up to since the fall of GameFan? I designed manuals and packaging for a
few PS and PS2 games, translated a few games from Japanese, and won the poster
design contest for the original 'Resident Evil' motion picture -- it was fun to
see my design on bus stops and in theater lobbies, I'll tell you. I did not
enter the 'RE: Apocalypse' design contest, which I sincerely regret. I also
worked for Matthew Taylor (aka Slasher Quan)'s Versus Books until its demise, designing
countless strategy guide covers. Gaming-wise, I am currently in a sort of
limbo, consumed by the sound and the fury of 'Final Fantasy XI: Online'. Ryan/Orion,
Casey/Takuhi, and Craig/EvilLights will probably remember a statement I
repeatedly made: "I'll never play an MMORPG; my perfectionist personality
is such that I'll never escape from it." And so it is. I find myself
consumed, addicted to FFXI; I'm a key member of the top NMLS on my server. I'm
the only non-Japanese member. I have three jobs at Lv75. I have forty million
gil. I have two full sets of abjuration equipment. No, this doesn't mean
anything. MMORPGS are -crack-. My advice to you...don't play them. If you are a
hardcore gamer, the type that -simply cannot rest- until you've achieved Big
Boss rank on Extreme mode in 'MGS', the type that is not satisfied until you've
finished the battle mode in 'RE Code: Veronica' using only Wesker with the
knife, do not play MMORPGs. To paraphrase Alex from 'SFIII': You can't escape.
On my "reputation": As I said
above, I was/am a perfectionist. As a result I had a reputation as being -completely-
unable to meet deadlines. I do not deny it. The only reason I was able to
complete such eye-popping layouts is the simple fact that I was heavily
indulged by Dave, with regards to time. On a personal level I like to think I
got along with everyone at GameFan, but on the "professional" level (was
there such a thing?) many people resented me for the seemingly endless time I
was allowed to take on layouts. I was only a teenager at the time, but looking
back I realize I was blessed with a level of autonomy that no other editor/designer,
save besides Takuhi and Dave himself, enjoyed. I would often take a week on a
single layout when others would have only a day or two for theirs.
To everyone who had something nice to say
about my reviews, and especially my graphic design, thank you. Thank you so
much. Especially Shidoshi and Reubus, dudes who I worked with, thank you for
your kind words. You guys rule. I'm sorry we didn't stay in touch. (To Reubus: I
still have your copy of 'Goedel, Escher, Bach'! It totally blew my mind!) At
any rate...I was quite proud of GameFan's look, originally created by such
luMinaries as Tim, George and Jacob, and the heights to which designers like
Gerald, Gary, Bruce, Jeremy, Waka, Greg, Mike, and myself took it. It was at
complete odds to the "cool" design trend of the period -- indeed a
trend which continues to this day, aided by Flash and whatnot. I speak, of
course, of "techno" design. To current proponents of the genre, I say:
Get over it. The Designers' Republic mastered the style in '93. Will you
forever ape them? Take a step beyond, people. I may never have liked techno
design, but I do respect it. It was very, very fresh at the time...over a
decade ago, let's not forget. You could call it a battle of ideologies, though
that term may be a bit too Kojima-esque...bitmap VS. vector. I attempted to
carry the GameFan style over to Versus Books, but was never quite able to
express it except on covers and back covers. I was quite fond of the "Phantasy
Star Memories" section which I wrote and designed in Versus Books'
'Phantasy Star Online' guide, however. That and the 'Resident Evil' theatrical
release poster. To me, this is the final expression of the Nick Rox GameFan "style"
-- please permit me to use such a lofty term. Thankfully people like EvilLights
(Craig Keller) at Kaizen Media Group/Prima continue developing the style.
Whoa, this post is insane. It's a madman's
manifesto. No cohesion whatsoever, no relation to previous discussion, and you
know what? I don't care. Speaking of design, art, and whatnot, Terry Wolfinger,
you are the fricking man. I'd never have mentioned this here had Terry not
already brought it up, but we are talking about a colorblind artist. I'm not 100%
sure on the details, but apparently the range of the spectrum that Terry had
the most trouble with is blue. Monitaur is blue. We blessed with full-spectrum
vision take this completely for granted, but Terry drew the undeniably blue
Monitaur for years...every time to perfection. Terry is truly a world-class
artist and gets my vote for "Most Blazing, Blissful-Awesome Dude To Emerge
From GameFan, Ever".
...Whoa, I just noticed the smilies on this
board. Mad props are given to the Opa-Opa icon! Not to mention 'Kamigami No
Triforce' Link and the Chu-Chu...damn. I sense die-hard game fans at work.
Anyway, in closing, a few parting words
only true GameFans will recognize...
Skilliam "Skills" MacGregor and
Styler "Styles" MacGovern say: Respect! Flex! Do Mah Mai! It's just a
balls!
=====
isamu
Quote Originally Posted by EvilLightsCK
EvilLights was I, and "Stalker" was
Dan Gran(n)et(t). Whom I believe died in 2001 or 2002, not 1998 .
EvilLights, with all due respect, it was
either 1997 or 1998. Trust me.
======
djpubba
Hey, nice to see you poking around the
gaming scene, Nick. Indeed your Guilty Gear design was quite nice. If you ever
want to get back into designing manuals and packaging, let me know. We have
some clients with the kind of titles you may still enjoy working on.
NRX quote
he created GameFan, wrought it from the
very ether, and without him this thread would not exist. Everyone who talks
shit about personal experience with him -- let's face it, you wouldn't be where
you are today without DH.
I disagree with this strongly. You can't
possibly know how GameFan was truely created since you were not there. Halverson
did not create GameFan out of the ether, not by a long shot. I got myself where
I am today by doing what I love doing, just as Halverson got himself where he
is by doing the same.
People can form their own opinions of what
kind of person Halverson is. Most of the stories I've told of him are a
recounting of the facts as I remember them. Those memories are what form my
opinion that he was satan walking the earth. Whether anyone else forms that
same opinion, I could care less. It was fun to talk about my experinces at
GameFan and that's my only reason for posting.
==========
Takuhi (Casey Loe)
Rox!
Long time no see! It has saddened me than an
Y's game has come and gone with no comment from NRX. Also, has FFXI so
ensorcelled you that you have neglected to appreciate the majesty of DQVIII?
Hey everyone else! How ya been?
I've enjoyed the reminisces here, and would
gladly have shared some of my own if I did not have the memory of a goldfish. (And
this without the help of any pharmaceuticals provided by Andrew.) So my
recollections go something like this: "Hey remember that thing with Nick,
with that one game? The bad American one, with the driving, and that announcer,
and the whole Captain Snappy thing? And he either said or did something really
funny? Remember that? Man, good times."
But I do second Nick's defense of Dave
Halverson... I can't speak for the early days of GF, and Dave did have a
compulsion to people what they wanted to hear (often in lieu of the truth), but
there was no malice in it. He was fiercely passionate about gaming and making
the best mag he knew how. If you're looking for the stench of evil, I assure
you it was coming from the offices David Bergstein or Jay Puryear, not E. Storm.
The only time I ever saw Dave be intentionally cruel was to Shidoshi, and if he
has forgiven him, surely the teeming masses can as well?
====
Reubus
Holy crap on a stick, Nick and Casey! And
Craig! Wow... You're still alive? (just kidding...) How the hell are you guys?
Drop me an e-mail, I'd love to chat with you guys!
As to all the comments regarding Kei Kuboki
and the dog, I saw NONE of it (thankfully), but do remember something about him
humping our couch, back when Waka and I shared an office...
Maybe Waka remembers better, and can
enlighten us? =]- I'd love to get a copy of that Bone Thugs he used to play
constantly!
And a note to K.Lee, should he be reading
this: Metheny's newest is awesome!
=======
Shidoshi
It's funny, because my memory can be like
that. I can't remember exact details about the big things, but I can remember a
lot of little things. I remember when we first got in Soul Blade for PSX, and
everyone stood around in awe watching the intro. I remember Nick sitting out in
the little hallway between the staff area and Dave's office, doing whatever it
was with his NeoCD. I remember "arguing" (polite arguing) with Takuhi
over some of my entries in the AnimeFan Online dictionary, which Dave told me
to run through him first. I remember standing in Orion's office - when he was
in that weird office that used to be a hallway but was then half-heartedly
converted into an office - talking with Nick about anime voice actors. I
remember going to Takuhi for help translating a letter I had gotten from a girl
in Japan, and then getting jealous when he started writing to her. *laughs*
You know, for all the craziness and money
problems and crap equipment and whatnot that went on at GameFan, I'd go back
and do it again in a heartbeat. It really was this whole other world, and it
was the farthest thing from a "job" any of us could ever find.
=====
Shidoshi
You know, I remembered something else, something
I'm going to fess up about. *heh* Right before I joined GameFan, I was
producing a fanzine called Digital Anime. In the third issue, for some reason,
the "Blue Shadows" topic had come up, and I said how it was silly
that Nick had bitched about that.
GameFan ran their ad for new writers, and
in collecting material to send to them as examples of what I had done, I wanted
to include that issue. Right before I was about to send the package, I suddenly
remembered the Nick comment that was in it. I rushed that night over to
Kinko's, edited the piece, and re-printed the issue.
It's funny, though, because you don't
appreciate the situation people are in until you're there yourself. I look back
on my time at GameFan, and beyond, and look at the mistakes that I've made. Depending
on how many games you had to cover, how much work you had for the issue,
sometimes it was impossible to give each and every title the time they deserved.
That isn't meant as an excuse, it's just meant as a fact. I remember things
like Critical Blow for PSX, a game I originally trashed but lated came to really
like and respect. Or you have things like Samurai Shodown IV, where I gave it a
98% in my viewpoint but now wouldn't begin to score it that high.
In Nick vs. WD, I was always on Nick's side
on that one. Vic from WD was a psycho... I talked to him a lot before I joined
GameFan, I thought we were cool, and then once I joined the mag he turned into
a sudden asshole towards me, even to the point of insulting me and my writing (without
having read any of it.) WD's translations at that time, like them or not, were
full of ridiculous jokes, and Vic himself admitted that they took the basic
storyline of the games and then pretty much re-wrote the rest. On one side you
had a young, "fanboy" video game writer and the head of a "professional"
company... it was amazing how childish the company head was in the entire
situation.
===========
NRX
Replies from Tim, Takuhi, Reubus, and
Shidoshi (proper capitalization/lack thereof duly noted)!
You've made my day. Please allow me to
respond to your messages, in classic, incoherent Nick Rox style.
Tim, please don't misunderstand. Obviously
you wouldn't have a successful multi-media company if you didn't possess the
Mad Skillz(tm)! I have nothing but respect for your contributions to the birth
of GameFan (not least of which was singlehandedly creating the GF style), and
everything that came after. It goes without saying that Dave couldn't have
created GameFan without the talented people that surrounded him. I simply mean
to say, the man started us all down our path in the game industry, however
indirectly it may have been. You began with that first catalog and ads, I began
by basically hanging around Gamers' Club. (And oh, how I pined after those ads
you did in EGM! I'd stare at those things for hours when I was like 12 and 13,
marvelling at their intricacy. It was as if a whole new world of gaming I never
knew existed was opening up before me...and I guess it was.)
Takuhi: No doubt we have catching up to do!
I commiserate with you on the lack-of-memory tip. I've strained to recall
amusing GameFan episodes to relate here and have come up short. In fact, many
of the recollections already posted I'd completely forgot! The best I could do
is like, "Hey, remember when I was sleeping vertically in the broom closet
after I'd lost my office?" and, "Man, didn't Waka drive -fast-?"
and, "My 'Nightwarriors' book sure took a long time to finish!" and, "Wasn't
it fun breaking into Dave's office via the ducts in the ceiling in the middle
of the night to retrieve the 'Street Fighter Alpha' PCB that was confiscated
from us because we'd play it all day and not work, and then sneaking into the
unoccupied officies next door to steal a piece of ceiling tile to replace the
one I broke dropping 12 feet to the floor of his office, ninja-style?" As
for 'Ys VI', yes, it was/is an -atomic bomb-. I hope you'll play the PS2
version coming out in March, though I hear nasty rumors that it won't be
featuring the scandalizing JDK tunage from the PC original. Or maybe that's
just for the North American version. Hey, if it doesn't I'll send you the PC
OST as mp3s. It'll bring tears to your eyes (A note to Takuhi fans: The man
practically -was- JDK. He had fifty or sixty Falcom CDs, I swear to God). I am,
of course, playing Mister Yuji Horii's masterpiece, when lulls in my "Vana'diel
Life" permit. I am so pleased you've finally awakened to the majesty that
is 'Dragon Quest'!
The "Nick Rox: Movie Star" thread
amused me as well! I had no idea anyone took notice of the film 'Happily Even
After'. I shot it almost two years ago -- I believe I had four or five lines. It
was a tiny part, shot in a day, one take. I don't remember much about it except
that I wanted another take. And yes, I did make third callbacks for the role of
Anakin Skywalker in 'Star Wars' Episodes II/III, though I have absolutely no
idea how this information "got out". Getting so close to that part
was...a difficult experience. I like to fantasize that the Prequels would have
been good had I been in them. And I'd be married to Natalie Portman. Also I
would have won the Academy Award for Best Actor. Another tidbit for ya'll: I
also had a callback for the role of "The Kid" in the 'Matrix' sequels.
Whee! What might have been, eh? All I can say is "go-kitai shite kudasai."
Hopefully I'll be appearing in a Major Motion Picture coming to a Theater Near
You...just as soon as I can tear myself away...from the cursed 'FFXI'...
Man, Blue Shadows. I might name my
production company that someday. Nice ring, actually. If only I'd set the BGM
to "Original", might my life had taken an entirely different path...?
Shidoshi my good man, I'm glad to see you
still doing what you do best. Thank you for always sticking up for me whenever
a bit o' shit-talkin' was directed Rox's way. Yes, I took notice, with
gratitude. Regarding Dan Granett's tragic death -- I hope the superlative-laden
nature of my writing won't color that statement, it is was beyond tragic and I
mean that from the heart -- it definitely occured in 2001. We met and
interviewed Kojima and Yoji Shinkawa at the E3 that year, and got Solid Snake
sketches on our 'Art of Metal Gear Solid' books together. Actually, I think
Dan's was the Ninja. Anyway. I attempted to get his name in as one of the
dogtags in 'MGS2', writing a letter to Kojima in Japanese, which he acknowledged
the receipt of, but to no avail. Perhaps some other GameFan staffer met with an
unfortunate end in '97-'98...? I can't imagine who it might be, though.
Mzo, you're damn right. Casey made the best
English-language game guides ever, and you know what? He still does! Givin' a
shout out to my brothers at Kaizen Media Group -- look for their products
published by Prima. Yeah, that Prima, but don't let the name scare you away -- they
operate independently. Also, yes, I did like 'MGS2'. A lot. I thought the
Raiden device was absolutely brilliant, and I'm saddened that most fans didn't
understand his purpose. I'm even more saddened that Kojima got pissy with the
fans' response and lashed out like a wounded Anne Rice on amazon.com with the
truly ill-conceived Raikov in the otherwise genius 'MGS3', but that's another
story.
Super-Eggroll: Your Sho sig earns instant
respect. I'm astonished anyone outside of GameFan remembers Skills MacGregor,
though we all made every effort to promote his infinite mastery of fighting
games in many issues of GameFan. Yes, Skills is indeed a forgotten hero, as is
his even less-known rival, Styles. Perhaps they will one day emerge from their
hermitage to wreak havoc once again on scrubs everywhere. Something tells me
the current state of fighting games would disgust them, however.
This reminds me of an another potentially
interesting GameFan story. I wish I could remember the guy's name, but someone
sent the GameFan offices a professionally-designed business card for the (semi-)
fictional Skills MacGregor, complete with personal seal bearing the motto:
"Mad Skillz". That's a memento I wish I had held onto. I may be
wrong, but I think David "Hoagie" Hodgson kept it.
To King Of Fighters, I wish I could say I
remembered the art you sent in specifically. We sure did get tons and tons of
incredible fan art, though. Far, far too much to print. This reminds me of an
amazing artist whose work we printed frequently, a girl named Jen Seng who
happened to be totally obsessed with Guile. I always totally dug her style, and
she too has gone on to wonderful things -- like drawing the syndicated comic
strip 'The Boondocks' for a while, to Aaron McGruder's script. She might still
be doing it, actually, I'm not sure...I squint at the signature in the strip
and it no longer seems to be Jen's. Maybe my vision is just getting worse. Perhaps
someone could enlighten me! Anyway, I think she kept in touch with Terry, who
she was a big fan of.
To isamu, I -do- remember you. I even
remember telling you 'Ys Book I - II' was my favorite RPG, though if you asked me
today I'd be tempted to say 'Suikoden II'. I am flattered by your kind words,
and gratified that I "got through" to someone via the conduit of
GameFan, for that was my surely my intent. Old-school Japanese 2-D gaming needs
more champions, and I'm honored to see people like yourself taking up the
charge. I'm no ECM -- I readily embrace 3-D gaming when it works (I'm thinking
Kojima, Miyamoto, Mikami) -- but my heart will always remain steadfastly
affixed in two dimensions. And my favorite game system is -still- PC Engine. I
see you have love for some 3-D games as well -- 'Ridge Racer' will always be a
classic! Play 'Ridge Racers' on PSP if you aren't already. It is joy-drenched,
blazing, blissful.
Jeez. Another day, another manifesto. I'll
quit while I'm ahead, but anyone who'd like to drop me a line, please do so! Believe
it or not I still maintain the same e-mail address. If you don't have that...hmm.
Maybe I'll set up another address to deal with mail originating from this
thread. Until next time, I remain
Mister Nicholas Rocks.
Oh! Oh! Now I'm totally reminded of where
my breathtakingly lame GameFan name came from. No, I didn't choose it. Actually,
many of us had our monikers chosen for us...a story for next time.
======
djpubba
Thank you for the flattery. Of course I was
not single handedly responsible for the style. Dave would say what he wanted
and George, Terry and I would deliver it. So, what emerged was a group effort,
not purely a Halverson creation. Swap out Terry for a different artist or
George and I with different layouters and the results would have been very
different. Maybe better, maybe worse, but not the same GameFan that emerged. I
will take 100% credit for the screen shot quality, though. ;-)
If I had not been willing to trade ads for
games, make the magazine for free with my own equipment, and stubbornly stay at
GameClub creating the first issue alone for a week while Halverson hid at home
afraid to deal with how to pay me, GameFan would never have happened. When I
arrived Halverson didn't know the first thing about computers, couldn't type
and barely knew the basic rules of spelling and grammar. My drive to make a
magazine and my ability to do it is what got Halverson started in the magazine
making business. I've seen him post in public that I was one of the many people
he got started in the business and that I didn't even know how to work in color
before I met him, as if he somehow made it possible for me to do that. Fuck
that. That's such a typical Dave Halverson disconnect from reality. He took
advantage of my skills to start a magazine, lied to me to get me to give them
freely, and only barely compensated me for it all in the end because he was 50%
dependant on me to make the magazine for him at the time I discovered he was
screwing me over.
If I hadn't met Halverson I'd still be
doing what I do today. If Halverson hadn't met me or someone like me to make a
magazine for him, he sure as hell wouldn't be making magazines by himself
without a few more years of hen pecking at a keyboard at the very least.
Edit: So Halverson did not start me on my
path, we all started down the same path together. As for talking crap about
him, come on. The man deserves crap for the shit he pulled. Yes, he did it only
to make a great magazine, and a great magazine indeed came out of it, but that
doesn't mean we shouldn't give him shit for it. He gave us 10x the level of
shit he's getting back.
==========
Takuhi
Hey all!
Thanks for the warm welcome! I can't
believe I have fans from the GF days... You guys made me feel, for one brief,
shining second, that my entire life has not been a colossal waste.
Captain Normality - You know, I ran into
Jen Seng online about a year ago. (I was the postmeister during the Jen era, so
we sort of knew each other) She has a website, but I forgot the url... You can
probably google it up. She sent me a picture once, and surprisingly she was
actually cute. Just thought I'd throw that out there, since we all had our girl
gamer crushes.
Amusingly, many of the GF readers' crushes
were on our very own Kelly Rickards. I would get at least one postmeister
letter a month asking us to "run a picture of her" or talking about
how great it was we had a girl writer and what is she like, really?. Admittedly,
it's an unusual name for a guy, but "her" character clearly depicted
a well-muscled man.
Mzo - Thanks for the kind words! I loved
doing this guides... I really miss being able to say whatever I wanted in
unofficial guides. One hint of any sort of humor and licensors completely freak
out now.
Shidoshi - HA! I had forgotten about that. I
TOTALLY STOLE YOUR PEN PAL! Did you know she did the art in the versus FFVII
guide and the maps in the RE2 guide? And that she designed... Um... I forget
which Pokémon, but some of the only good new ones in gold and silver. Do you
still talk to her ever? I haven't heard from her in years, though. Wow, I feel
sort of bad now. I was a shameless pen pal cuckolder. Hey, still into Tori
Amos? Her new single is up on her website, if you weren't aware.
One thing I do clearly remember is your
first day at GameFan. Dave really liked your fanzine, but right after your
interview, or whatever, Dave came into my office and was like: "DID YOU
SEE THAT GUY? He's wearing FINGERNAIL POLISH! Like a GIRL! LIKE A GIRL!!! And
he WROTE ON HIS SHOES! Why would someone DO THAT?" He went on for fifteen
minutes or so, and while he was clearly being an ass, I was amazed that he was
so legitimately stunned. Clearly he had not been outside in a public place
frequented by young people since 1978 or so. (As his own personal style
attested to.)
Dolomite! You rocked in Shaolin Dolomite. Really.
Great flick.
Reubus - What the hell are you up to these
days? Yeah, I'm still alive! I'm now trying to remember what arcane copy
editing debate we managed to maintain for months. Do you recall?
NRX - I maintain that I have not come
around to DQ, but that DQ has come around to quality. DQ8 stuns me! As for Y's
VI... WHY WOULD YOU REPLACE THE MUSIC IN AN Y'S GAME? That's... that's MADNESS!
I already do have the PC soundtrack to Y's VI, but I was hoping for a nice
arranged version. What have you heard about Taito's Y's V remake?
Yeah, it's sad how hazy those stories have
become. The other day I was thinking about a good NRX story... And you need to
correct me if I'm wrong here, Nick... I think you quit or something, and then
came back, and Dave was being petulant and decided to make you write reviews
and do layouts for crappy american games instead of imports for a month. And so
you did all these reviews of AWFUL, AWFUL, US-made Saturn games, written
painfully earnestly, and then even after Dave tired of the punishment you
insisted on keeping at it for months, either to prove a point or solely for the
sake of irony. (Some of those reviews are absolutely hilarious, but only if you
read them in Nick Rox's voice.) As a result, Nick Rox is quoted on the boxes to
some of the worst games ever made.
Okay, that's not a great story, but I do
remember that period fondly, because it meant I got to do all the good imports.
Still, I KNOW we're all holding back some
great stories. And I think part of the reason is out of respect for a certain
GF staffer who is actually on these boards. Um... So what do you say, Andrew?
Can we tell the really, really great stories? Now that you've found Jesus,
surely embarrassing stories of your misspent youth will help you repent past
sins and cement your bond with the lord? Yes? No? Maybe?
======
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by NRX
Oh! Oh! Now I'm totally reminded of where
my breathtakingly lame GameFan name came from. No, I didn't choose it. Actually,
many of us had our monikers chosen for us...a story for next time.
That was all Dave! He made me draw you that
way too, I swear! Hi Nick, how are ya?
Originally Posted by djpubba
So Halverson did not start me on my path,
Amen! Speak it, my brother. I know I
definitely did not get my "start" from Dave. I came to work for
GameFan at age 25-26. I purchased a house with the monies I made from my first
endeavor, Hard'N'Heavy Video Magazine at age 22. So I was already pretty
established in the art world when I joined up. Dave can lick 'em. :-D
======
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by Takuhi
But I do second Nick's defense of Dave
Halverson...
Casey... it saddens me to here you say such
things... I just can't begin to fathom why anyone would want to deffend
Halverson. He was not a good guy. Yes he had a pure passion for gaming etc.,
but he was such a slimeball in every other facet of life. I guess I can
understand the perspective of you and Nick and Shidoshi; all young kids getting
their first start in the industry, and being grateful for their first real "job".
Forgiving is fine, but lets not paint the guy as a saint. Did you know all the
times we were not getting paid and Dave would tell us how he's in the exact
same boat that he was in fact cashing his checks before anyone else (and
depleting the funds...). I can go on and on... And to diss on Jay?! Jay stuck
it thru to the end and was the only one who was actually up front with how
fucked the whole situation was and honestly tried to keep it all together. Berstien?
Yes, very Evil- tho only slightly more evil than Halvetica abnormal.
Any ways, I always liked ya, Casey. Hope
you are doing well.
=========
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by Voltz
I remember hearing the news on GR when Dave
got his new house and wheels while everyone was told they wern't welcome to
work for him anymore. I'd like to hear more to clarify this.
That is pretty accurrate, great big house
with very nice furnishings while all the editors were three to four per
apartment living off Top Ramen. Dave had a new vehicle like every 5 months... like
a spoiled kid just had to have the latest toy and got bored with his old ones. I
remember one year as a Christmas bonus we all got these stuffed Sonic the
Hedgehog dolls... woot
I'm doing well thanks. I've been my own
boss for about 2.5 years now. I work with Tim a lot and still do a lot of art
in a lot of areas.
=========
Wolfie
Quote Originally Posted by Zero-chan
Wolfie: I had heard rumors that Halverson
used to have a strange obsession with Jen Seng... any truth to those?
Oh God. I hope not! But I wouldn't be
surprised. I think we all just really Loved Jen's work. She's an amazing artist.
She was also a really enthusiastic gamer and would send us these huge letters
asking about all kinds of games etc... We all looked forward to hearing from
her. She and I still talk quit frequently. She's just an awesome person.
========
Takuhi
Hey Terry!
Yeah, it's me, Casey! It's great to hear
from you again, and see some new Wolfie art again. Where are you at these days?
(I know, I'm just too lazy to read the beginning of this thread and find out) Still
have that beautiful woman? Still have that beautiful car?
Wow, I had no idea you had anything against
Dave.... You always seemed pretty tight at the time. Of course, my somewhat
fond reminscences of Dave are partly due to the fact that I left before things
got really bad. I had my share of get-to-the-bank-in-time cash runs but I never
got totally screwed like the rest of you.
That said, I don't know that I could blame
Dave for that. It was pretty clear to me from the beginning that Dave was hands-off
on money issues and the like, and while he was beyond naive for inviting in
snakes like Bergstein in the first place, I can't blame him for the business
side of things. That's partially why I blame Jay... He WAS the business side of
it, but I don't recall him ever looking out for anyone but himself.
I'm certainly not saying he was a saint,
though. He lied constantly, but it was so pathological that you almost came to
expect it. I don't think he intended to deceive or defraud anyone, he just
couldn't accept the reality of things. Perhaps I'm being overly rosy in my
memories... I remember the GF days fondly and for some reason Halverson puts me
in the mind of Kramer from Seinfeld or any other bumbling but likable sitcom
character.
Hey, do you know what's up with Joe
Koberstein these days?
King of Fighters, CaptainNormality, and
Zero-chan,
Thanks so much for the praise! Of all the
things I've done, that FFVII guide is certainly the one I'm most proud of (and
those old FFVII previews for GF are certainly up there too. Man, I worked on
those for weeks!). But really, you're all insane if you don't sell those FFVII
guides on eBay while, for some bizarre reason, they're actually worth something.
It really is a shame about how doMinant the
clean-white look is becoming in everything game related. And like I was saying
earlier, most companies are so zealous about protecting their licenses you
can't even write about them in any sort of whimsical or opinionated way. When
did games start being so serious? Everything has to be clean and proper and
sedate, like we're writing about international diplomacy or the spread of AIDS
or something. They're just *GAMES*! They're supposed to be FUN!
Alright, that's my old-fogeyish rant for
the day.
=======
Wolfie
Casey! Hi! So yeah, bring up allll the pain
at once- Me and my "beautiful lady" parted ways quite some time ago. And
I sold that car a few years back as well Ah, but its all good I've been working
as a freelance artist from home last couple years. Koberstein is good. He's
back in Wisconsin, married (I was in his wedding), and he's a recent daddy. He's
a higher -up art director guy at RavenSoft. We chat on occassion.
As far as Helvy goes... well he was a
character and I guess it was kind of easier to just humor him to get along, as
it is with most bosses. And most of the really bad stuff was found out after he
bailed. So then suddenly all his promises were shit...
But you were the character, man. You had
that great dry humor! And you liked NIN! Still listen to them as much as ya
used to? So enough about me. How are you doing? Where are you at these days?
========
Reubus
Quote Originally Posted by Takuhi
Hey all!
Reubus - What the hell are you up to these
days? Yeah, I'm still alive! I'm now trying to remember what arcane copy
editing debate we managed to maintain for months. Do you recall?
Heh, that "stll alive" jibe was
tossed Craig's way, not yours! And "arcane copy editing debate"? I
can't even come close to recalling specifics. I remember a debate or two, but
nothing specific as far as what they were about! Allow me to second Wolfie's
question: What are you up to these days? Weren't you on your way to Japan to
teach or something?
Nick: Drop me an e-mail, I almost forgot
about that book! BTW, I still (!) haven't finished reading it. I can't seem to
wrap my brain around some of that math shit. It starts about a third of the way
into the book, but by a couple chapters later, I'm lost! If you made it through
that crap, following that math, then by god (raises frosty mug) here's to ya!
=]
======
JesusisGod
Quote Originally Posted by Takuhi
And I think part of the reason is out of
respect for a certain GF staffer who is actually on these boards. Um... So what
do you say, Andrew?
You can say what ever you want. My memory
from back then is not too good because of the amount of weed I was smoking and
my marriage problems. You probably have some great stories that I might need to
hear. So, please go ahead.
Andrew
=======
Zero-chan
Quote Originally Posted by Mzo
I was thinking about that, too. Seems that
he got hired without most people's consent, and then one day he's editor-in-chief.
He got his start in #GF_Tavern chat,
actually. I dunno how he managed to get pulled out of there and put into a
position of employment - we just heard one day he was going in for a job
interview. As far as I know Halverson never come into the chat, but somehow, he
liked the guy. *insert derogatory variation of "great minds think alike"
here*
Anyone have more details on this?
Also, does anyone remember the old location
test Street Fighter Alpha 2 preview? Supposedly that was written by Slasher
Quan around the time he left to do work elsewhere, and Dave was so pissed that
he had the name at the article's end changed to "B. Stabber". Any
truth to this? (It IS in the mag, tho - I have that particular issue still.)
======
Zero-chan
There used to be an interview with Dan
Jevons (Knightmare) up on this site, but it has vanished into the ether. Thus,
fishie has kindly provided me with the transcript, viewable here:
http://www.night-striker.net/etc/Dan%20Jevons%20Interview.doc
There's some amusing GF-related tidbits in
here, as well... have fun!
[FILE SINCE REMVOED - INTERVIEW LOST
FOREVER]
=======
Typefiend
Quote Originally Posted by Gondolin
...btw, who did the design and layout for
Gamers' Republic? GR is partly to blame for my interest in design.
Okay, I'm going to give into my ego a bit
and lay some claim to that. When a few of us left GF to start GR, the GF art
director Gary Harrod and Dave gave me the reins to a large extent to form the
basis of the GR magazine (the masthead title, fonts, style guides, etc). Gary
was really an amazing designer whom I owe a great deal of gratitude for
direction, criticism, and support. He could be scathing when he didn't like
something, but he also was an extremely detailed designer with a formal design
background that everyone at GR and GF respected, and he aided my first stint as
an art director.
Its obvious at the time we were heavily
influenced by the information overload made famous by The Designers Republic,
Attik, with a smidgen of early RayGun-David Carson. Young, dumb and full of....fun?
I will give Dave credit, and fondly, for the most part he was very supportive
and trusting about us taking a more modern design approach than GF (though he
fought alot about the concept of empty space); we wanted to have it be packed
with visual interest, but also rein in some of the freeform tendencies of GF (which
I think represents something special in itself). GF to me has always been more
an example of artistic beauty and passion than what I would categorize as
design; layouts were personal extensions of many of people who laid them out (Nick
was the virtuoso of the crew, but damn, he did get way more time than anyone
else so it was an example of natural talent aided by a unique situation of
having near indefinite time to see his vision thru....very rare in the actual
print/design world) and there was very little groundwork for organized visual
communication of what we could and could not do. "Just make it look
stimulating" seemed to be the code, and hell if it wasn't fun. At GR,
since we didn't have the same staff size for design, since we were also
launching a strat guide division, we had to streamline some of the design and
only aim for "hardcore" for features. And I think some of the designs
done by Gary, Gerald, Jeremy, Edd and myself were visually arresting. Of
course, limitations noted didn't stop us from putting in photos of friends,
hidden messages, tiny photos of women in thongs, and other tomfoolery that kept
us sane under the pressure of working under Dave. So "it was the best of
times, and the worst of times", but times I will never regret experiencing!
=====
Shidoshi
This isn't directly GameFan related, but
since this thread is as much about the people behind GF as it is the mag
itself, I thought some might find this interesting.
This is the first two issues of Dragon's
Tail. (Well, issues #1 and #3, as I have forever lost issue #2.) This was the
first real fanzine I ever produced. Before this, I had made a few small little
two page newsletters, but this was my first real attempt at trying to make
something that could be considered a fanzine.
I won't feel one bit bad if people are
horribly cruel about it. *laughs* They really are terrible, and I can only
laugh when I go back and look through them again. Take in mind, though, that I
made these things a little over sixteen years ago, and this was back when the
most desktop publishing experience most people had was Print Shop.
Anyhow, here you go.
Dragon's Tail #1
http://d105423.temp37.hostica.com/dtail01.pdf
Dragon's Tail #3
http://d105423.temp37.hostica.com/dtail03.pdf
=====
Shidoshi
I remember getting new magazines,
especially issues like the EGM CES show issues, and just spending hours pouring
over every detail of the screenshots. I remember being at school looking
through the game lists that the game shops that advertised in the back put into
their ads. The ads were black and white, and there would always be these games
you had never heard of, or sequels to games that hadn't been announced. It was
so exciting reading through those lists and wondering if those games really did
exist, and if you might suddenly see them on the shelf the next time you went
to a store. I also remember taking that damn NES Player's Guide from Nintendo,
which was like a gaming bible back then, and spending hours re-reading every
page of it.
======
Spidey
So I just discovered this forum tonight. Have
to chime in! (I was too late for all the GameFan craziness, but man was I a fan
of that magazine, warts and all. When you think about where the industry was at
the time, it was a perfect reflection of what we loved about gaming.)
I started working with the Gamers' Republic
guys on the second issue, after learning of an opening from Ryan Lockhart. Whatever
its faults, the mag was a blast to work on. I still say some of the best talent
in the industry was on that thing. Looking back, we were all little immature
kids, loose in a new play pen that generated enough good memories for a
lifetime. I still have to laugh at some of the squabbles we had and mistakes we
made. I wouldn't trade the experience in for anything. A few of my best friends
in life came out of there.
A huge hello to any oldschool GR dudes
reading this!
-brady
==========
http://www.digitpress.com/forum/showthread.php?14983-Some-questions-for-a-Die-Hard-Game-Fan-magazine-expert
POST BY USER CAFEMAN ON DIGI PRESS
REGARDING HALVERSON:
I interviewed DH as part of a 3-part series
(also Chris Charla and Steve Kent) called Interviewing the Game Writers. As
info, Charla's and Kent's interview questions were done & posted in the
spring; it took DH half a year more to find time to answer the questions, he
even lost them at one point & I had to re-send them. But he continually
promised he'd get to it, and he came through. He seemed unbelievably busy to me.
If you want to read detailed reports of
Gamefan stories, go search on related topics at the TNL forums, and also
there's a lot of ex-Gamefan guys who frequent Gaming-age's forum. There were
beans spilled at the old GameGO! forums years ago too.
My take: I loved Gamefan in the DH years. There
was a noticeable drop in quality for some time after DH and gang left, but I
was starting to enjoy Gamefan once again under ECM as editor in chief, when the
whole thing collapsed again. It only took one year of late/missing
subscriptions for me to learn NEVER subscribe to Gamefan, buy it at the
newstand. For all the bad talk about Dave, it is in direct contrast from what I
perceive him to be like, coming across as jealousy in some instances. Dave has
got the fire inside about gaming and regardless of what games he likes/dislikes,
this is what makes his magazines successful & a great read-through. Dave
has always had a penchant for ink-filled pages & layouts and I love that. DH
really won me over with Play (I initially didn't like it, now it's my favorite
game mag).
ECM had an acidic, elitist style of writing.
He knew what he liked and pulled no punches ripping apart games and people he
thought sucked. Again, regardless of whether I agreed on his choices of games
or not, I was always quite entertained by his writing. I talked to ECM quite a
bit on chats and the GO! forums, he always came across to me as a nice guy.
Concerning ECM, one of the coolest things
that I remember happening me concerned the Genesis game Ristar. I found it late
in the 90's and loved it, and I made this tribute page:
http://cafeman.www9.50megs.com/necessary.html
Not long afterwards, ECM had a Graveyard
special on Ristar which I tremendously enjoyed reading. I emailed him (for the
first time I think) and linked to my own Ristar tribute page, and he replied to
me that my page is what inspired him to write the Gamefan Graveyard article in
the first place. Back then, the idea that something I put on the net might
influence the direction a game magazine took, well it impressed me.
ECM and TK's GameGO, now THAT was
unfortunate. I heard lots of $$$ was lost on that endeavor. Is GameGO #1 worth
mega bucks yet?
========
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite
Here's something I've always wondered
about, and I guess this is the perfect place to ask. Who the hell are these
guys in the old Gamefan Subscription ads? Are they from a movie or what?
Don't say I never do nothing for you guys -
I tracked down the answer.
They were photos taken by people over on
the Metropolis side of things, possibly from one of their other magazines. The
infamous Dave White, over on the GameFan side, got the photos, and did some
photoshopping to them.
========
ExcaliburGenX2
Revoltor: No, I know something DID happen -
there was a public exchange of words had between Halverson and Semrad on the
editorial pages of their respective publications. Apparently, EGM and GameFan
had an on/off rivalry that was taken public by both magazines' editor-in-chiefs.
I remember reading Halverson's editorial, and Semrad's response. I may not be
sure about Semrad even saying anything about it in public, but I definitely
recall Halverson writing an editorial or two about the whole thing. Anyone ... ?
=========
Veela
Quote Originally Posted by sethsez
This thread rules, but really. There's only
so much to talk about.
Oh, I could probably start talking about
Play, that could open a whole new can of worms!
Shidoshi, if you ever happen across this...Dave
hasn't changed. At all. In fact, he's worse. Then again, I don't know the whole
story of GF, but Dave's spiral into complete possession by the Devil is nearly
complete.
Well, I laugh at Dave a lot.
And yeah, this is Veela, formerly of Play. Dave
fired me last month...and it's really weird, my story STRANGELY parallels
Shidoshi's. Like, Twilight Zone style.
========
Shidoshi
I'm not going to comment on your situation,
for a number of reasons. First, I don't know you, so saying anything for or
against you would come without knowledge of you at all. I've also heard things
about your situation from other perspectives, so that complicates knowing whose
is being honest about what.
What I'll say is that it always sucks when
somebody doesn't have things turn out the way they hoped, so I certainly feel
for you in that regard.
I'll also say that Mike Griffin - somebody
I still have a lot of respect for - chose to go back to work for Dave, and is
enjoying doing so. That says a lot to me. That isn't meant as a jab at your or
anything, just as a factual statement.
And I know you guys like drama, so maybe I
can help provide some more here soon, especially in light of our new arrival. *heh*
=======
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Glass Joe
Damn Shidoshi, that is some seriously
turncoat shit right there. You all (ex GFers) had a few unbelievable stories
about how Dave treated you guys. Now that you are/might be going to work for
him again you shouldn't play like they never happened. Shame on you.
Where did I play like it never happened?
I've never taken back anything I said. Ever. If I was trying to get on his good
side for whatever reason, I'd say "oh I never said that," or go back
and delete my old posts, or try to skew what I said. I haven't.
What I have said is that people can change,
and what happened between him and I happened almost ten years ago. You want me
to just sit around for the rest of my life being bitter about something that
happened that long ago? Doesn't sound like a lot of fun to me. Thinking about
how different of a person I was back then, compared to who I am now, leads me
to believe other people can be the same way. Long before anything that may or
may not be going down right now, I talked to him, and we put all of that stuff
behind us.
Thus, don't sit here waving a stupid finger
in my face, telling what I should or should not be saying, just because you
aren't hearing what you want to hear.
==========
Voltz
Dave doesn't really suprise me anymore,
afterall he gave himself and Hodgeson a nice fat bonus for closing gamers
republic. They got houses and SUVs, the rest of the staff was told to fuck off
without notice.
========
Shidoshi
I don't know the facts behind the
situation, but let me ask this: if that was 100% true, why did some of the
staff from Republic follow him to Play?
======
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by RoleTroll
So what's the scoop? One guy wanted his old
job back, and got the boss to fire the chick doing his old job and give him the
job?
I had absolutely nothing to do with her job
until after she was gone. Come on now - I'm not even close to being that big of
an asshole. I had been talking to Dave for a while about maybe doing something
for Play, and it was all "possible" stuff until after Veela was gone
and he asked me to step in as online guy.
It was only my "old job" in the
way that I used to do it way back in the GameFan days, and I only started doing
it at that point because I was mostly forced to.
======
[MANY PAGES OF RUBBISH]
01 Jun 2006, 10:32 PM
jriskin
I know I'm like 6 years late on this
thread, but I just wanted to confirm any info if anyone is interested...
RE: Cybermorph... There were only a few of
us there that weekend, I believe I was the only one who stayed all night that
night besides George and D. Halverson. Fortunately for me I don't drink coffee...Dave
and George both DID drink it, and trust me, while it might not have been a
heavy trip, those two were staring at the screen for HOURS...
Dave, seriously thought the characters in
the game knew he was watching! On the other hand he once mentioned he was
afraid David Blane knew he(halverson) knew he(blane) was magical and thought he
might come and get him. But who knows, he was probably stoned then too, my pot-dar
isn't very strong. I highly (bad pun) doubt he would have dedicated THAT many
pages and the cover if he wasn't so obsessed with it from being on acid.
If anyone has any questions from my era of
Gamefan, feel free to ask. I'm still good friends with Terry W. but I rarely
see the rest of the crew except the occasional run-in at E3 or the infamous E3
Sony parties (which I passed on even going to E3 this year).
Jacob Riskin
=======
03 Dec 2007, 04:32 PM
Shidoshi
So, I wanted to bring this thread back for
a moment, due to what I received in the mail today. A check for $269, paid due
to the finalization of the bankruptcy case of Express.com... aka, part of the
group of people that ran GameFan into the ground.
Just over seven years after the final issue
of GameFan was printed, I get one last paycheck (in a way) from GameFan. I
ended up being owed $2500 in back pay, and as of this check I've been paid just
over $500 of that. I wasn't at all expecting to receive this money, but my name
was still hanging on as part of the list of people who would get some sort of
further compensation, so I had an idea that I might get something.
So, thanks GameFan... because of you, seven
years later, I can go buy myself something nice. (Not something $2500 nice, but
who am I to complain.) As well, my personal saga with the mag now finally comes
to an end... seeing as how, you know, this was my last chance to get any money
from the entire thing. *heh*
========
Shidoshi
I don't remember how it began, but I think
I tracked down the law firm that was handling the bankruptcy, told them my
situation, and then had to file some paperwork in order to get onto the list of
potential payees.
I know for sure, though, that then a few
years ago, they were going to drop a bunch of the creditors from the list of
potential payouts. Thankfully, I actually read over the huge packets of legal
stuff I'd get every now and then, noticed this, and called and made a complaint.
They were trying to drop people they thought had invalid claims, or claims that
weren't of importance, and I think for me Express.com's lawyers were trying to
argue that I wasn't a true employee. At that point, I submitted whatever proof
I was able to dig up (old pay stubs specifically listed Express.com, my signed
agreement with GameFan, etc.), and that kept me on the list.
So, I'd say, try to find out who is
handling the bankruptcy case for your situation, call them up, and find out if
you have any options, or if it's too late for you to make a petition for
yourself. Then, of course, prepare to (a) wait a long, long time to get any
money, and (b) be happy with whatever you get, because you probably aren't
getting anywhere close to all of it.
=======
April 2010
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite View
Post
So it's just Gamer's Republic/Play 2.0. Fail.
Actually, probably worse than that, because
Dave was starting to get to the point where he thought Play wasn't being
handled properly. You know, things like not having ridiculously high scores,
not giving the shit games he liked eight pages each, only giving coverage to
games from companies that purchased ads, etc.
Brady, and the staff overall, was helping
keep him in check. Now, he's got people who won't stand up to him in regards of
those things, he's got more reason to only give coverage to companies that
spend big ad bucks with (due to needing to keep this thing afloat), etc.
=======
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by Dolemite View
Post
...or maybe Halvy just spins a good line of
bullshit.
He really has that Steve Jobs quality to
him where the stupidest ideas in the world can come from his lips but when you
hear them they seem to make perfect sense. Then, when he's not around and not
talking to you, you'll think to yourself, "What the fuck am I thinking
listening to this guy?" And then he'll talk to you again, and for some
reason you'll be back to buying it.
=====
Shidoshi
Play is 1.2 million dollars in debt. That's
what happened to Play.
======
Shidoshi
Since I wrote a post about it on Play's
forums this morning (which the strangely disappeared a short time later [the
forums, not the post]), for anybody curious, here's a rundown of what the main
staff is owed at this point.
Bill Gray (did anime stuff): $5,350
Brady Fiechter: $16,000
Casey Loe: $5,835
Eric L. Patterson: $2,544 (which I would
actually argue should be around $4,400)
Greg Orlando: $400
Heather Campbell: $1,800
Matt Cabral: $7,650
Nick Des Barres: $1,800
Robert Duenas (art): $3,625
Quote Originally Posted by RoleTroll View
Post
Shidoshi, just wondering, would you how
much money it takes to start up a print magazine and give it a good year or so
to find its legs?
Unfortunately, I don't know exacts. The
production of the magazine would cost next to nothing, so long as people are
willing to work for free for a while and you have at least a couple of computer
sitting around.
Print and distribution is where things get
tough. I've never done anything but small-time print runs, and even those can
get pretty pricy. You then have to get good distribution (aka magazine rack
space), which I've heard can be very hard to do, unless you're willing to just
distribute it via some sort of online source.
You won't get serious response from most
advertisers until you've got an issue or two to show, and even then typically
you won't get the money from any ads you sell for at least a few months.
========
Shidoshi
From bitmob:
http://bitmob.com/articles/dave-halverson-speaks-the-demise-of-play-magazine
Dear Mr. Halverson,
I was hoping to discuss the closing of
Play Magazine with you. I have been a loyal subscriber for a few years now, and
just discovered the magazine was shut down. I am also hearing rumors that you
may be looking into restarting GameFan.
Would you be willing to discuss any of
this with me, or do you have any messages you would like to give to Play
subscribers?
Sincerely,
Frank Anderson
Here is Dave's response:
Hi Frank,
Thanks so much for the inquiry as I've
heard many a disturbing rumor regarding Play's demise. Fact is it hit no one
harder than myself. After nearly 10 year's of 'round the clock work, hearing
the company was in dire straights this past November--I was working on the year
in review issue no less, a celebration of sorts--hit hard. It was a culmination
of things that ultimately took Fusion down. What was a terrible year ad-wise
was made all the worse via Geek never finding its audience (a great mag tho). It
was a big drain on the company but a risk admin felt (I'm told) was worth
taking considering the potential. It just got worse though.
This economy is like nothing we've ever
seen. Shame they robbed Peter to pay Paul though. Had I known I would have done
everything in my power to stop it but my role was 100% creative. That said, I
guess everything would still have been OK, had Q4 panned out anywhere close to
normal but turns out it was a disaster. Over 60% of our advertisers decided to
abandon print and go online exclusively. No matter how much we fought and could
prove our readers choose print they just slammed the door in our face like we
were pond scum. It was a rude awakening after 18 years. There's too much turn
over in the game biz. Too many relationships come and go. Our best clients have
always stood by us--or more over, our readers--so once again I've decided to
tough it out and stay the course developing print, rather than joining the
online community. Nothing against online, but, it just doesn't hold water for
me. I love print media. always have; always will.
Truth be told I wasn't all that
thrilled with Play last year. I felt we needed to evolve but was always met
with skepticism and or fear. I wanted reviews back in, more original content, a
bigger size and so on but it wasn't to be. So maybe this was meant to be. I
love fresh starts and the way GameFan was taken from us has always haunted me,
so, I figured why not... As magazines go all three I've been with have defied the
odds. 1 in 10 succeed and even less make it past the five year mark so I guess
I've been lucky in that respect. I just wish I could find someone on the
business end as dedicated as I am on the creative so we could weather these
storms that hit every now and again.
I set the new company up personally--it's
my first since the original GF--so I'll be running the GF office until I find
the right person to stay the course, so no surprises. No way I can go through
this again. Making magazines is an extremely personal thing, at least for me. The
only reason I really do it in the first place--it's also really hard on an
indie level--is for the love of games and the people who make them, and the
readers.
What a mess the US press has become. I
can't sit by and watch great games get massacred while assembly line
blockbusters get the red carpet treatment from freelancers who can't brave
anything beyond extended tutorials or understand art beyond different ways to
render a meat-head. Bigger isn't only not better, it's debilitating. The
industry is all out of whack. That said, man, it hurts to read what people are
saying. I've worked my ass off for going on 2 decades and have 3 kids. Like I
need Joe-bonehead hurling accusations for them to ponder. But I can't involve
myself in all the cynicism. That stuff drags you down. I prefer to stay
positive and live every day.
As soon as the GF site is up we'll be
offering free digital subs to Play subscribers and huge discounts on print. Issue
1 is on its way to newsstands now so by the time it hits we'd like to reach as
many subscribers as possible. Fusion may be gone but I'm here for you. My crew
is all new (and growing) and really pumped to be doing something unique. It's
nice to work with hungry people again willing to brave the early days of
building a print foundation; not an easy task. GF is work in progress but issue
1 is a good start in my book. I threw out the old format and started from
scratch developing what I think a modern print magazine needs to be, and set up
the co. in such a way that we don't need to rely so heavily on advertising. In
a perfect world we'd nail down a dozen choice clients and close it off. In
fact, we just may. Because at the end of the day 10 of our readers are worth 1000
online. The smart money realize it, and I've grown tired of trying to convince
the "eyeballs" sect. Let 'em drop like flies. It's fun to watch.
...I feel a rant coming on so I better
go, but hey, thanks again for actually asking me directly. This has been really
hard on me. I've had to fight for every inch and some people still see me as
some tyrant. I'm anything but money grubbing or greedy, which seems to be the
problem. I just don't believe in cynicism, really dig a great video game, and
believe that hard work and dedication is the only way forward (along with the
new DL game nets). Next stop XBLA! Thanks.
PS. Shoot me your address and I'll send
you the first issue of GF. Feel free to let any other subscribers know that I
have their backs too. I'm limited in terms of what I can do to reach them so
every little bit counts. Looking for like-minded gamers/writers and a business
manager too if you wanna put the word out.
Take care,
Dave
===========
11 April 2010
Shidoshi
Hello to whoever it is that is reading this
thread and told Dave about it!
"Somehow" as in I got an utterly
crazy email from Dave.
My absolutely favorite part was where he
actually went back 14+ years and used the fact that I showed up at GameFan
wearing black fingernail polish as an insult against me! Either he is a
dedicated listener of WAHP, or that event made such an epic impression on his
life that he never forgot it.
Also, I was not aware that t-shirts, jeans,
and Doc Martins counted as "freak show wardrobe".
========
Shidoshi
Well, I don't know the full story, but I've
always been confused with Dave's timeline of getting into games. I swear that,
from how I understand it, he got into games in the 16-bit era (which I honestly
think he's said at times), and then he'll say things to the effect that he was
playing games during the NES era.
And yeah, I'm 99% sure I was reading
GameFan during 1993. As well, indeed, I was getting Transformers toys before I
even had an NES I'm pretty sure. If not, I know for certain I was getting not
original-series TFs for the same birthday that I got Ghosts 'n Goblins for NES.
I STILL have not seen the issue, but now
that somebody has found it, I'll hit the bookstore tomorrow to see if they have
it yet.
====
Shidoshi (on the first issue of new gamefan)
Got my copy today. Haven't read any of it
yet, but here are some initial thoughts. Just to be clear - I'm being totally
unbiased here, and coming at it as I would any other magazine. I also realize
that this is not only a first issue, but one that was brought together in a
short amount of time. So, I'd expect at least some of these things to work out
as the magazine really gets going.
The main comment I had heard was that it's "OMG
huge", and it is definitely big. If the magazine was thicker, I think the
larger size would be nice, but as it is, it feels exceptionally flimsy. Paper
stock is very thin, and being saddle stitched (as in, big pages folded and
stapled in the middle, versus a hard spine), the magazine wants to bend in half
vertically if you hold it upright. If paper stock and page count end up not
changing, I think it was quite a mistake to go for the large size they went
with. I also think it might not have been the best choice given the layout
style they seem to be going for (more on that in a moment).
The magazine opens with its very first line
of text being wrong - the original GameFan magazine started up in 1992, not 1994.
I find that funny.
Pagination feels like a total mess. Things
feel like they've been placed completely at random, and there's nothing to
really help you understand the transition between content. (Which isn't helped
any by the lack of a TOC.) The idea of Viewpoints - mini-reviews where more
than one editor reviews the same title - are back, but there's stuck in before
the actual reviews section. It feels awkward and out of place there. The
original GameFan had the Viewpoints near the front of the mag, where as EGM has
their very similar-styled short reviews section near the back. The problem is,
it's a very structured and detailed section, and putting something like that
smack in the middle of more content-focused page layouts doesn't work.
The overall layout design reminds me of the
original GameFan - and that's not good. Everything feels way too dark, and
layouts are either over-designed or just sloppy. I mean no disrespect to
GameFan's art guy Rob, who I believe is responsible for said layouts: I'm not
sure he has much history doing layouts, and he had a lot to do in a short amount
of time. Still, that's just how it is. Some of the design work I do like,
concept-wise, because big pieces of artwork are used, and those pages aren't
afraid of open space. Going back to my previous comment, however, I think a
slightly smaller magazine can work better for doing a lot of big art, because
then you have a better chance to find pieces that are of a resolution that
won't look like crap when sized that big. That's a small point to make overall,
though.
What I think really needs to happen is for
pages to get clearer indicators letting you know what you're looking at. There
are far too many pages where you just have no clue what you're looking at from
the information that is provided on the page. Don't expect people to know that
they're looking at a preview - tell them. Every page of content should be
clearly marked as to what it is.
There is a serious lack of non-preview / review
content, but again to be fair this is the first issue, and Dave himself says in
the opening ed zone that they didn't get all of the stuff they wanted into the
issue. Don't do news, though - seriously, it's worthless. If you have
worthwhile text you can write that concerns a new story, then great; recycling
stuff that is old by the time an issue hits is just a waste of space. Okay,
breaking my previous rule, one personal comment I'll make - Dave has said that
he "wanted to do more" with Play (though, everybody on board did), so
I hope that he'll make good on that and do more with GameFan. If it's just
going to be a bunch of reviews and previews with a few pages of filler (like
the original GameFan was), there's no place for magazines like that in the year
2010.
69 pages of games, and then 28 of movie
stuff. I don't care. I understand the desire to also do the movie stuff, but
are you going to be able to do quality content without needing more pages and
then taking away room from the GameFan section? Do 30 odd pages of
entertainment content deserve their own branding and wacky "flip over to
read" requirement? I know the argument is to sell "two magazines in
one," but I have no confidence in the idea yet. The bookstore I picked
GameFan up in didn't have the magazine reversed as MovieFan over in the
entertainment section. If they can get that done, then that'll be a plus, but
I'm still not sold on the idea of doing the flip thing. If I'm spending $8 on a
game magazine, I'd rather put that chunk of money toward a magazine like
GamesTM, where I'm getting a thick book of nothing but gaming.
Design-wise, the GameFan portion of the
magazine is what it is, but the MovieFan portion is god-awful. Almost every
section has this bizarre "I just learned how to render text in 3D!"-looking
logo, and elements on the pages just kind of... exist. Oh, and then there's the
page where I have to hold the magazine sideways to read it. DO NOT DO SHIT LIKE
THAT. It isn't cool, and it serves no purpose except to be fucking annoying. Otherwise,
browsing through the content, like I said, I don't care personally, but a lot
of what I see looks like total filler. I think, even more so than gaming, the
market for movie magazines have some seriously good offerings, so a lot of work
needs to be put into the MovieFan stuff to make it feel worth paying attention
to. Otherwise, you're going to have a section movie buffs don't give a damn
about, and the people buying the magazine for the gaming stuff feel is a
complete waste of space.
Oh, and why is there a preview for the Iron
Man 2 game in the MovieFan section? When Play and Geek were separate magazines,
that kind of thing made sense. Here, it's just weird.
So, my initial thoughts, coming from
somebody who (a) loves print, and (b) is very anal about things like design and
formatting. It's a first issue, and first issues are notoriously rough, so I
don't expect what I hold in my hands now to be what you'll find six months or
so down the road. I do think that, for that price, with the magazine market the
way it is, and with EGM soon to take away a decent chunk of its thunder,
GameFan had better whip itself into shape ASAP. There aren't enough people who
know (or care about) the name GameFan at this point, so it won't survive on
brand alone.
=======
Shidoshi
Quote Originally Posted by kingbet123 View
Post
Shidoshi, have you heard anything else
about any other problems? Thanks!!!
Well, ends up they lost two staff members,
not one. Issue #3 is completely doing away with the magazine being flip-style;
I guess it'll just be GameFan now, and maybe have a MovieFan section in it
somewhere. As for issue #2, while I was able to confirm that it does exist at E3
(I held a copy for about 20 seconds or so), it's now over two months since I
found #1 on store shelves and issue #2 is still nowhere to be found as of yesterday.
Sounds like it might finally be hitting this week, though.
Being that I don't work for them, I don't
know anything for certain, but I would always be concerned whenever a magazine
misses an issue by such a large amount of time. From what I've always
understood, distributors really, really don't take kindly to that, and it also
doesn't look good to people you're trying to get to subscribe to your magazine.
(Speaking of which, I think they still aren't even offering subs yet.) For
their sake, hopefully they can get issue #3 out the door on time and not have
another big delay like they had for #2.
I will say, from my brief time with the
second issue, the paper quality was much better, which is good. Other than
that, though, I didn't have enough time with it to be able to really look at
any of it enough to remember much.
========
Shidoshi
My first "professional" layout
ever! (Not writing, but layout I actually did.)
http://www.flickr.com/photos/45478630@N07/4267428697/in/set-72157623192904630
Yup, it was Quark. I think, at the time,
that was the only serious option for print layout software. Of course, Quark
was terrible, so I was happy when Adobe finally gave them real competition.
That's what I was trying to think of: PageMaker.
I knew there was an "alternate" app back in the days when Quark was
big and ruled the universe. I remember learning PageMaker in high school, and
using that until I got to GF and switched to Quark.
=======