Nintendo Gamer


Nintendo Gamer was a magazine published in the United Kingdom which mainly covered Nintendo video game consoles and software and consoles. It was the successor publication to N64 Magazine, later renamed NGC Magazine and Super Play, continuing the unique style of those magazines. The publication was originally known as NGamer, with the first issue being released on 13 July 2006. From issue 71 onward, released on 5 January 2012, the magazine was renamed Nintendo Gamer and was significantly reformatted. On 30 August 2012, it was announced that issue 80, which went on sale on 7 September 2012 was to be the final issue.
Upon launch the magazine covered the Nintendo DS, GameCube and Game Boy Advance formats, with pre-release coverage of the Wii. Full Wii and Nintendo 3DS coverage were added over time, as was reports about the then-upcoming Wii U in later issues.

Editorial staff

Nintendo Gamer's main staff writers and designers were:

Staff members

These people occasionally contributed game reviews, but were not regular NGamer or Nintendo Gamer staff members.
Nick Ellis "vanished" from NGamer HQ after issue 47, so Martin Kitts stood in as Editor until his return. Several small references to Ellis were made on the 'final word' page. He returned as Editor in issue 54, before leaving for good in issue 56. He made his return to the magazine in issue 78 and stayed until the magazine's sudden demise in issue 80.

Sections during the NGamer era (issues 1 to 70)

NGamer had the following sections or features in its magazine from issues 1 to 70. This was subject to change as new issues were published.
In Issue 1, the magazine printed their revised review scores for GameCube, Game Boy Advance and DS games; made by intense negotiation by the staffers. This was because they felt that review scores in NGC Magazine had been too lenient, so they used a stricter scoring system. This stricter system was used for all NGamer/Nintendo Gamer reviews.
ScoreGames
100%WarioWare D.I.Y. In the redesigned Top 50 DS games, WarioWare D.I.Y appeared with the score of 88%. The eShop re-release of the Game Boy version of Tetris was given an apparently genuine 100% score in issue 72 of the magazine.
98%Super Mario Galaxy 2
'
97%Super Mario Galaxy
'
96%Super Mario Sunshine
Resident Evil 4: Wii Edition
95%Resident Evil 4
'
'
94%Advance Wars
'
No More Heroes
World of Goo
'
Mario Kart 7
93%'
'
Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Fluidity
'
Xenoblade Chronicles
'
92%'
Animal Crossing
'
Manhunt 2
Little King's Story
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Pushmo
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91%'
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Puzzle League DS
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Ōkami
'
Metroid Prime Trilogy
'
Rock Band 3
90%Pikmin 2
Super Monkey Ball
Metroid Prime
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'
'
'
'
Red Steel
MySims
'
'
The World Ends with You
Pro Evolution Soccer 2009
'
'
Infinite Space
Scribblenauts
Jam with the Band
LostWinds
'
And Yet It Moves
'
'
'
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Super Mario 3D Land
Resident Evil Revelations
Tales of the Abyss
VVVVVV''

Lowest scoring game

The lowest scoring game in NGamer's history was the Nintendo DS game Secret Flirts II, which received a -47, the reviewer stating it to be "A hateful piece of software."

Novelty scores

Certain titles have received 'novelty' scores, as opposed to scores that fit in with the scoring system properly. As well as WarioWare D.I.Y. and Secret Flirts II mentioned above, Witch-touching game Doki Doki Majo Shinpan scored 'No', while a DS entry in the Cabela's hunting series scored ':('. Spelling title Mizuiro Blood scored '???' due to its bizarre nature.

NGTV

NGTV was the name applied to the DVD given away with the first 15 issues of NGamer. Each 'episode' contained footage of both newly released and upcoming games, as well as other footage of interest, for example of little-known or unreleased Mario titles or retro games that the NGamer staff wanted to appear on the Wii's Virtual Console. Episodes 3 and 4 both featured commentary by then-editor Mark Green, with Episode 4 containing a documentary of some of the NGamer team going to test the Wii. Episode 5 contained a video walkthrough of the first few dungeons and villages in. Episode 6 contained a video walkthrough to the last five dungeons of The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess, as well as a video guide showing small Easter eggs that can be done on the Wii. Episode 7 showed a detailed Virtual Console review guide, as well as a review for Pokémon Battle Revolution, and a guide to importing Japanese Wii consoles and games. In a made by Mark Green at the NGamer forums, it was explained why the DVD was discontinued as a monthly gift after issue 16.

Dutch NGamer

There was another Nintendo magazine named NGamer, of Dutch origin with no links whatsoever to the UK magazine. It was published bi-monthly and was the longest running Nintendo-related publication in the Benelux region. This magazine pre-dates the British version by three years; its first issue was released in 2003. Other than the similar name and the shared specialisation, they are wholly unrelated. The very last issue was in December 2012.

Brazilian NGamer

In July 2007, a magazine was released about Nintendo with the name NGamer by Editora Europa. It features links with the original NGamer. As well as this, some features from the UK magazine were translated. It is published monthly with a page length of about 100 pages.

Spanish NGamer

On 20 October 2007, the Spanish version of the magazine became available in stores. It was published by Editorial Globus. However, it only lasted 19 issues until it stopped being published in 2009. Most of its content were translated from the UK issues.

Recurring themes and in-jokes

The magazine continues the tradition of including in-jokes and themes that may recur for several issues of more. Here are some notable examples: