PC Format

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PC Format
Editor Adam Ifans
Categories Computer magazine
Frequency Monthly
First issue 1991
Company Future Publishing
Country Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom
Language English
Website www.pcformat.co.uk
ISSN 0963-5521

PC Format is a computer magazine published in the United Kingdom by Future Publishing, and licensed to other publishers in countries around the world. In publication since 1991, it is part of Future Publishing's Format series of magazines that include articles about games, entertainment and how to get the most out of the platform. Despite the occasional mention of alternatives, PC Format takes the term 'PC' to mean a Microsoft Windows-based computer.

Contents

[edit] Details

Aimed at a reader with an age of around 30,[citation needed] PCF is far more irreverent and opinionated than its competition,[citation needed] edging it towards being a lifestyle magazine as well as a computing one. In its earlier days, it promoted itself as a PC entertainment magazine - meaning it was not aimed at the business market, and it was not aimed at solely games. This included content such as video editing, animation, web design, and others - many of which were not very common on the PC at the time.

PC Format has included a cover disk or cover CD, as many other computer magazines. Initially these were in 5 1/4" and 3 1/2" inch floppy disk formats; this standard progressed to CD-ROM and DVD-ROM as technology advanced. Now however, the CD version does not exist, and only the DVD version remains. You cannot buy the magazine on its own without a disk.

PC Format has prided itself on being unbiased with its reviews, and has frequently given low scores to blockbuster, but poor quality, games. It uses the full range of 0-100% for its game reviews, rather than having 50% for a bad game and 100% for a great game. The magazine rarely awards anything between 30% and 50%, only showing radical scores for games since mediocre games are difficult to review. Scores over 90% are very rarely granted. If a game scores above 90% it receives a PCF Gold award. Before the magazine was redesigned in January 2007, the magazine also awarded 80% plus scores with a high score or top gear award.

Immediately prior to PC Format's launch, the Format series encompassed three platforms - Commodore Format, ST Format and Amiga Format. The magazines in the 'Format' series today are MacFormat (launched 1993), Linux Format (launched 2000), and PC Format.

PC Format is easily recognisable because the front cover of almost every issue has a female cover model - it was the first magazine of its genre to do this. Exceptions to this include issues #137 and #200 which both featured first look preiews of anticipated games- Doom 3 and BioShock respectively.

PCFormat's website will be absorbed into Future Publishing's new Tech.co.uk portal.

[edit] Content


The main content of the magazine includes previews and reviews of the latest games, software and hardware reviews, computing news, a wide range of tutorials and a technical help section. It also includes left-field and investigative features on wider computing culture. Since the redesign, the magazine has focused more on games (PLAY) and performance hardware (WIRED), instead of the greater range previously explored. There is now also a much greater emphasis on Overclocking and Modding articles, keeping in line with the new performance hardware and gaming focus.


[edit] Format as of January 2007

  • DOWNLOAD: Technology and PC news, previously included monthly Guerilla Testing for solving often irrelevant computing issues (What are the best gloves to wear whilst fitting a graphics card?)
  • UPLOAD: Readers' letters and monthly competition.
  • PLAY: Games previews and reviews. Includes features such as in-depth guides, recommended games and a "Replay" review.
  • WIRED: Hardware reviews, includes a main in-depth supertest comparison with benchmarks, a smaller "roundup" group test and technology previews.
  • HOTWIRED: PC modding feature; often includes overclocking tips, a reader's case modification project, Quick Fix tutorials, custom hardware guide and the multipart From Useless Pig To Super Rig project which aims to create a PC Format PC that has modifications made to it by the team, but with the design chosen by readers' votes.
  • FEATURES: Not an individual section of the magazine, but every issue comes with in-depth game or hardware articles that are featured in either PLAY or WIRED.
  • REGULAR ITEMS:
  • Welcome
  • Disc Pages
  • "Ask Luis": Readers' computing questions are answered by Technology writer Luis Villazon. Includes "Luis and Ned" cartoon strip.
  • Jims Black Hole: Science News (previously Jackass Science)
  • Next Month preview

[edit] The PC Format Team

  • Editor: Adam Ifans. Past editors include Bob Wade, Mark Higham, Dan Slingsby, Adam Oxford, Dan Hutchinson, James Binns and Richard Longhurst.
  • Deputy Editor: Alan Dexter
  • Games Editor: James Carey
  • Technical Editor: Al Bickham
  • Production Editor: Alex Jones
  • Technology Writers: Jeremy Laird, Luis Villazon
  • New Media Editor: Jeremy Ford
  • Art Editor: Louise Day
  • Deputy Art Editor: Dave Partridge

[edit] External links

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