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The Evolution of Nintendo Power
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Friday, October 02, 2009

Nintendo Power

Editor's note: The gaming-magazine business has always been interesting to me (it doesn't hurt that I've spent a third of my life in it). The evolution of Nintendo Power specifically is even more fascinating, having gone from a hardcore fave to a magazine that has to cover the casual and family-friendly games that define current Nintendo platforms.

Nintendo Power is surviving in this tough magazine market, with a reported circulation of 350,000 (compare to roughly 500-600K for EGM while I was working there). But will the Wii's mainstream success ultimately help it? Or send it to its doom? -Shoe


This has been something that has been bothering me for some time now -- Nintendo Power, a magazine that I have grown up with, isn't nearly as interesting as it once was.

I've been a subscriber of Nintendo Power for 10 years now, and either my expectations have increased or the games the magazine staff writes about have gone down the drain. Just compare the covers from their early days. They've gone from Mega Man, Mario, and Metroid back in "the good ol' days" to Sonic and His S*** Friends, Indiana Jones and the Staff of Whatever, and Generic Minigame Ripoff Party!

Clearly, Nintendo Power is not to blame. The supply of hardcore games on Nintendo consoles have since slowed from the days of GoldenEye 007 and Super Mario 64. So who is the target demographic these days for them? Children who use the Wii as a primary console and idolize everything Sonic and Pokemon?

 

I think that's safe to say. Here's a fairly reliable look at Nintendo Power's demographic (at least online), whether intended or not:

Whether the Nintendo Power staff is to blame or not, for the past several years the publication has failed to jump out of the pages the way EGM did, both aesthetically and in terms of writing personality. Although the games covered aren't particularly interesting by any stretch of the imagination, the writers don't seem to be very interested themselves in selling or convincing their audience that a particular game will be fun. (Maybe after all the movie-licensed cash-ins, it's slightly harder to be optimistic about games.) It seems as though they approach each magazine as an arduous task, loftily critiquing games in order to avoid hate mail or controversy.

I've noticed since the redesign, Nintendo Power never seems to step out of its boundaries. It always strictly covers games, with a miniscule piece about video game art toward the back. Now, I'm not asking for a Maxim-style magazine that tries to appeal to all 17-30 year-old males...stuffing women, cars, and video games into one gigantic disaster. But I would enjoy seeing some intellectual pieces that aren't inextricably cranked out each month, with some thought, perspective, insight, and maybe even a little personality -- kind of like Robert Ashley's articles in EGM or what we see from The Official Xbox Magazine.

I've come to the unbelievable conclusion that Nintendo Power is no longer for me. When Mario and Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games is featured as the cover, I must say goodbye -- as much as that hurts after spending 10 years with the magazine. Sorry Nintendo Power -- but you are not what you once were.

So does anyone here either still subscribe to Nintendo Power or consider ending your subscription?

 
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Comments (9)
Lance_darnell
October 02, 2009
I cancelled my subscription in 1993. I have picked up the odd issue now and then, and from what I have read you are right. The whole mag seems more like a retail flyer than a real magazine. The review scores are ALWAYS higher than they should be, and all Nintendo-made games are rated way too high. But you nailed it when you said that NP has no hardcore games to cover. I think that is the problem. Nintendo is so closed-doors on their upcoming games that NP could be getting good exclusives, but I guess there is nothing to show.
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October 03, 2009
I used to be a subscriber during the golden years (SNES-N64), but I stopped during the Gamecube generation. Came back to it for the Wii and DS but came to the same conclusion as you.

Nintendo, where art thou great games?
Me_and_luke
October 03, 2009
I subscribed for most of the Gamecube generation and then moved onto to GI (I was getting too much into the Xbox and 360 to continue to only read content about Nintendo games).

I can see why you're backing off of NP, but you can't really blame the lack of hardcore (Nintendo franchise) games on NP. The lack of interesting content is based solely on the keep-everything-under-wraps shoulders of Nintendo. It's really too bad that NP doesn't get more early, exclusive content and previews into any games, much less their own beloved franchises.

Nintendo is killing me a little bit inside with each passing month. It's pretty much come down to when are the next Mario, Zelda, and Metroid coming out, as the love for the countless other Nintendo series seems non-existent.
Dtj
October 03, 2009
Like all video game magazines, I think Nintendo Power had its share of great and not-so-great eras. No offense to the current team, but it's currently in the latter category. My subscription ended right before the transition, and I don't see myself renewing anytime soon.
Dan__shoe__hsu_-_square
November 08, 2009
It's difficult for these guys without a constant stream of Castlevania, Mario, Metroid, Zelda, Star Fox, and other hardcore franchises coming out every month! It's not the same as it was back in the 80s and 90s.
Jamespic4
November 09, 2009
@David Clearly, you are wrong about the golden era of Nintendo Power. It was during the NES era.

Did they have Fabio on the cover during the SNES era?

What's that? The sound of flabbergasted silence?

On the real, I think Nintendo Power probably always sucked. We were just to young to realize it.

Though those Super Power Club trading cards were pretty awesome.

Wait... am I confusing the adjective awesome with perforated?
November 09, 2009
I suppose I am in the minority then thinking that Nintendo Power actually has gotten tremendously better since the re-design and purchase by Future Inc a few years back. I too have fond memories of the magazine growing up and have a complete collection dating back to issue 88. Clearly the mag was at it's best in these older issues, but it definitely became a ridiculously obvious promo tool during the gamecube era when nintendo still published the magazine on its own. Hell they wouldn't even mention the competition by name. This was a time when I actually started my subscription to EGM (instead of picking them up at the library) as an alternative.

Anyways, after Chris Slate took over as editor-in-chief i feel like this promo aspect went away and the magazine became simply a place to only talk about games on nintendo systems. I even feel like the writing got better than the almost pure PR drivel in the gamecube era. They even did an all-rpg issue a few months back with some well-written previews. I think all you haters need to take a second look and just ignore the cover game stories if you don't like them.
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November 09, 2009
@Lance:

Pretty much my thoughts exactly. After growing frustrated with how every Nintendo title always seemed to score higher than any other company's title, and how the magazine read like nothing other than pro-Nintendo propaganda, I canceled my subscription as well.

@Hsu:

"It's not the same as it was back in the 80s and 90s,"

I feel this way about the industry as a whole. Granted, there's been some fantastic innovations and games, but at the same time, it feels less sincere and personal than it once was.
Default_picture
November 09, 2009
I had a running subscription for around 5 years until I realized that I didn't care to spend the money on renewing it. I guess you could attribute it to the fact that I matured and grew out of the demographic NP focused on. EGM and GI became my bread and butter.
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