- amiga history guide Supporting Amiga and compatibles since 1997 -
-
-
- banners - disclaimer - faq
 
- - -
- -     -
-
recent updates
amiga history
features
amiga models
magazines
technical
interviews
internet links
downloads

 

-

© 1997-2006
Gareth Knight
All Rights reserved

-

 
-
The One for Amiga Games: May 1991 - April 1991

In April 1991 the magazine entered the second phase of its existence. This marked a golden age for both the Amiga and Atari St. The 8-bit formats were in an irreversible decline and owners were migrating to the faster 16-bit systems. The quality of software also rose when programmers finally got to grips with the custom hardware. This made a single-format magazine more viable. The decision was taken to split The One for 16-bit Games into two- one for the ST, and the other for the Amiga.
The One for Amiga Games & The One for ST Games
Despite the split, content remained similar between the two magazines. Many features fell into the category of general computing subjects and would be of interest to users of both platforms. For example, issue 32 of the Amiga and ST One had a feature on Broadsword Productions' latest TV series 'Cyberzone', hosted by Craig Charles. This was followed by articles on Hitachi, joysticks, and an obituary dedicated to the Atari Panther. The similarities between the two magazines were also demonstrated in the cover artwork, it was almost exactly alike. This was not surprising- both titles were produced by the same team. This made it difficult to develop a unique identity without ignoring the other.
The One for Amiga Games Issue 36 The One for ST Games issue 36
Over the next few months the identity crisis was solved by the individual markets, moving both titles in different directions. This allowed games that were unique to a specific platform to make an appearance. The news pages of the September 1991 issue featured a screenshot of a new football game to challenge Kick Off 2. Little did the writers realize that the as-yet unnamed game from Sensible Software would quickly become turn into the biggest selling Amiga title of all time. (In case you couldn't guess, the game was Sensible Soccer.)
- he One for Amiga Games, Nov 1991The One for Amiga Games, Dec 1991 The One for Amiga Games, April 1992

The magazine seemed to have regained its dominant position by November 1991. The cover proudly announced it was the biggest-selling Amiga title, quoting a circulation of 51, 625 readers (ABC Jan-June 1991). This annoyed the recently launched Amiga Power, who pointed out that the circulation was based upon a time period that the magazine was multi-format. The readership would have been based upon a combination of Amiga, ST, and PC owners. A second criticism made against the mag. were the unusually high ratings that many games were awarded. Scores of 90%+ were common and in many cases, the games simply did not deserve it. Unknown to readers at the time, this problem would soon be resolved in a rather dramatic fashion.
The Ugly Mugs of the One team- Click to enlarge

The next few months were a time of great change for The One for Amiga Games. Emap made the decision to have a major shake-up of their titles- Mean Machines was split into two titles, The One for ST Games was incorporated into Europress' ST Action, and ACE magazine was closed. In addition, editor Ciarán Brennan left the magazine for pastures new. This forced the other members of the editorial team- Heather Turley, Paul Presley, and Jools Watsham- to take on the role of co-editor. The last two of these events proved to be the most important in deciding the magazines' fate. The publishers decided that the magazine was not reaching its potential. To give the magazine a new direction and look, the original staff were moved and the ACE writers took their place. It is unknown where the original staff were transferred to, but speculation suggests they may have had a part in the launch of ST Review.

The evolution of The One had took a surprising twist with the magazines' relaunch. The resulting product was unlike anything that had gone before, representing the ACE-ification of The One.

Back to The One Index
Back to 'The One for 16-Bit Games'
Forward to 'The One'


-

Latest updates to the Amiga History Guide. (more)


-
· Amiga Hardware
· Amiga History.de
· Amiga Magazine Rack
· Amiga-news(en)(de)
· Amiga.org
· Amiga World
· AmigaOS 4.0
· Amiga University
· Commodore Retrobits
· Dave Haynie archive
· Lemon Amiga
· MorphOS Support
· morphos-news.de

-

Other interesting items in the archive!


-  

--

home · changes · amiga history · features · amiga models
magazines · technical · interviews · internet links · downloads

Hosted by:
Bambi - The Amiga Web Server