Next Generation Magazine

Next Generation Magazine

The cover of the January '95 issue of Next Generation.
Frequency Monthly
First issue January 1995
Final issue
— Number
January 2002
Volume 4 No.13
Company Imagine Media
Country USA
ISSN 1078-9693

Next Generation Magazine (also known as NextGen) was a video game magazine that was made by Imagine Media publishing company (now Future Network USA).[1] It was affiliated to and shared editorial with the UK's Edge magazine. Next Generation ran from January 1995 until January 2002. It was published by Jonathan Simpson-Bint and edited by Neil West. Unlike its competitors GamePro and Electronic Gaming Monthly, Next Generation was directed towards a different readership by focusing on the industry itself rather than individual games.

Contents

Lifecycle 2

In September 1999, Next Generation was redesigned, its cover name shortened to simply NextGen. This would start what was known as "Lifecycle 2" of the magazine. A year later, in September 2000, the magazine's width was increased from its standard 8 inches to 9 inches, however this wider format lasted less than a year. Subscribers of Next-Gen Magazine received issues of PlayStation Magazine when the magazine's life-cycle was terminated.

The brand was resurrected in 2005 by Future Publishing USA as an industry-led website, at http://www.next-gen.biz/.

Differences between Next-Gen and its contemporaries

Notable differences between Next Generation and other video game magazines of the time:

Issue history

Lifecycle 1 Lifecycle 2
Issue Feature
v1 #1 (January 1995) New game consoles
v1 #2 (February 1995) Online gaming
v1 #3 (March 1995) PlayStation
v1 #4 (April 1995) Atari Jaguar
v1 #5 (May 1995) Ultra 64
v1 #6 (June 1995) Crossfire
v1 #7 (July 1995) Wipeout
v1 #8 (August 1995) Sega Saturn TV Commercials
v1 #9 (September 1995) Destruction Derby
v1 #10 (October 1995) Madden NFL '96
v1 #11 (November 1995) Virtua Fighter's Sarah Bryant
v1 #12 (December 1995) 32-bit Videogame Report
v2 #13 (January 1996) Ridge Racer Revolution
v2 #14 (February 1996) Ultra 64
v2 #15 (March 1996) Next Generation 1996 Lexicon
v2 #16 (April 1996) How to get a job in the game industry
v2 #17 (May 1996) Codename: Tenka
v2 #18 (June 1996) Microsoft future for gaming: DirectX
v2 #19 (July 1996) Past, present, and future of online gaming
v2 #20 (August 1996) Super Mario 64
v2 #21 (September 1996) Next Generation's Top 100 Games of All-time
v2 #22 (October 1996) Venture capital in game development
v2 #23 (November 1996) Artificial Life
v2 #24 (December 1996) PlayStation vs Nintendo 64 vs Sega Saturn
v3 #25 (January 1997) Net Yaroze
v3 #26 (February 1997) Videogame Myths
v3 #27 (March 1997) Top 10 online gaming sites
v3 #28 (April 1997) Retrogaming
v3 #29 (May 1997) Something is wrong with the Nintendo 64
v3 #30 (June 1997) Why does a game cost $50
v3 #31 (July 1997) What makes a Good Game
v3 #32 (August 1997) Video game packaging
v3 #33 (September 1997) Design documents
v3 #34 (October 1997) The future of game consoles
v3 #35 (November 1997) 25 Breakthrough Games
v3 #36 (December 1997) Independent game developers
v4 #37 (January 1998) The most important people in the American video game industry
v4 #38 (February 1998) hardcore gaming
v4 #39 (March 1998) How to get a job in the game industry
v4 #40 (April 1998) What the Hell Happened?
v4 #41 (May 1998) The Fall of BMG Interactive
v4 #42 (June 1998) How games will conquer the world
v4 #43 (July 1998) The Licensing Game
v4 #44 (August 1998) The Console Wars of 1999
v4 #45 (September 1998) Dreamcast: The Full Story
v4 #46 (October 1998) A Question of Character
v4 #47 (November 1998) The secret of Namco's success
v4 #48 (December 1998) Do video games stand a chance in Hollywood
v5 #49 (January 1999) What did Super Mario 64 do for video games
v5 #50 (February 1999) Dreamcast Countdown
v5 #51 (March 1999) Physics Matters
v5 #52 (April 1999) Learning Curves
v5 #53 (May 1999) Man versus machine
v5 #54 (June 1999) Dreamcast versus PlayStation 2
v5 #55 (July 1999) Building the Future
v5 #56 (August 1999) Rare's Triple Threat
Issue Feature
v1 #1 (September 1999) Dreamcast Arrives
v1 #2 (October 1999) Hooray for Hollywood
v1 #3 (November 1999) PlayStation 2 arrives
v1 #4 (December 1999) The War for the Living Room
v2 #1 (January 2000) Crunch time
v2 #2 (February 2000) The Games of 2000 Will Blow Your Mind
v2 #3 (March 2000) Raising the Bar
v2 #4 (April 2000) PlayStation 2: Hands-On Report
v2 #5 (May 2000) Sega's new deal
v2 #6 (June 2000) Ready for war
v2 #7 (July 2000) Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty
v2 #8 (August 2000) The Making of the Xbox
v2 #9 (September 2000) Dreamcast: The First Anniversary
v2 #10 (October 2000) Broadband Gaming
v2 #11 (November 2000) Nintendo GameCube: Can Nintendo Compete
v2 #12 (December 2000) 2001 PlayStation 2 games
v3 #1 (January 2001) Got Talent: First Party Developers
v3 #2 (February 2001) Games Grow Up
v3 #3 (March 2001) Start your own game company
v3 #4 (April 2001) Field of Indrema
v3 #5 (May 2001) Old Systems, New Games
v3 #6 (June 2001) Sega's Next Move
v3 #7 (July 2001) Eidos on Edge
v3 #8 (August 2001) GameCube Exposed
v3 #9 (September 2001) Video Game U
v3 #10 (October 2001) 25 Power Players
v3 #11 (November 2001) Xbox arrives
v3 #12 (December 2001) Nintendo's GameCube is here
v4 #13 (January 2002) Xbox review

Current state

When the company publishing Next-Gen was forced to make cutbacks, the magazine ceased print. The brand was later revived and moved online. The website, Next-Gen.biz, carries much the same articles and editorial as the print magazine, and in fact reprints many articles from Edge, the UK-based sister magazine to Next-Gen. In July 2008, Next-Gen.biz was rebranded as Edge-Online.com.[2]

References

External links