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* AllWomenArePrudes: Deconstructed: One reader letter addressed the controversy of how women are depicted in video games by arguing that there are just as many hunky guys in games, and that women should open their eyes and enjoy the beefcakes instead of complaining about the scantily clad women.

to:

* AllWomenArePrudes: Deconstructed: One reader letter addressed the controversy of how women are depicted in video games by arguing that there are just as many hunky guys in games, and that women should open their eyes and enjoy the beefcakes instead of complaining about the scantily clad women. (the letter was from a woman, mind you)
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* AllWomenArePrudes: Deconstructed: One reader letter addressed the controversy of how women are depicted in video games by arguing that there are just as many hunky guys in games, and that women should open their eyes and enjoy the beefcakes instead of complaining about the scantily clad women.
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* WritersCannotDoMath: The ''Stunt Race FX'' review is a notable example. The game scored "7" and "8" in every category, yet ended up with a 90% score.
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* DenserAndWackier: The format from roughly mid-93 to September 1996.
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* RunningGag: When ''VideoGame/PaRappaTheRapper'' was brand new, the magazine frequently made light of the fact that this was one instance where rap wouldn't cause a drive-by shooting. Some readers wrote in complaining of this [[LogicalFallacies logical fallacy]].
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''Game Players'' was a video game magazine that had its best years in the mid-[[TheNineties 1990s]]. Starting out as a seemingly-regular game mag (debuting in 1989 around the same time as ''GamePro'' and ''ElectronicGamingMonthly''), there was very little to separate it from the competition as far as video game magazines went, but in the mid-90s, it shifted into a more comedic, irreverent style with Chris Slate taking over as its Editor. Under Slate, the entire magazine started getting more deliberately wacky, with the game reviewers gaining personality (and faux-personality, with Bill Donohue as an evil dungeon-master and Mike Salmon as a sarcastic ladies-man).

to:

''Game Players'' was a video game magazine that had its best years in the mid-[[TheNineties 1990s]]. Starting out as a seemingly-regular game mag (debuting in 1989 around the same time as ''GamePro'' ''Game Pro'' and ''ElectronicGamingMonthly''), there was very little to separate it from the competition as far as video game magazines went, but in the mid-90s, it shifted into a more comedic, irreverent style with Chris Slate taking over as its Editor. Under Slate, the entire magazine started getting more deliberately wacky, with the game reviewers gaining personality (and faux-personality, with Bill Donohue as an evil dungeon-master and Mike Salmon as a sarcastic ladies-man).
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I\'m pretty sure EGM and Game Pro both debuted before Game Players.


''Game Players'' was a video game magazine that had its best years in the mid-[[TheNineties 1990s]]. Starting out as a seemingly-regular game mag (that was actually the very [[NewerThanTheyThink first one]] not devoted to only one system and produced in-house by a video game company). There was very little to separate it from what came later as far as video game magazines went, but in the mid-90s, it shifted into a more comedic, irreverent style with Chris Slate taking over as its Editor. Under Slate, the entire magazine started getting more deliberately wacky, with the game reviewers gaining personality (and faux-personality, with Bill Donohue as an evil dungeon-master and Mike Salmon as a sarcastic ladies-man).

The letters page started with several running gags, with Donohue and the fans building upon each others' jokes, creating new fictional characters and personas, speaking of a "Cleansing" (and later, "The Rinsing"), and promises of world domination and violent reprisals. It was just that kind of a mag -- mostly nonsensical, and all in good fun (and vulgar taste). While ''Game Pro Magazine'' was far bigger, and ''EGM'' and ''Diehard Game Fan'' got all the "legit" industry cred, Game Players was a wild and wacky book with running gags, a letters page that was 80% joke-topics (leaving the rest for actual video games), and stands out even today.

to:

''Game Players'' was a video game magazine that had its best years in the mid-[[TheNineties 1990s]]. Starting out as a seemingly-regular game mag (that was actually (debuting in 1989 around the very [[NewerThanTheyThink first one]] not devoted to only one system same time as ''GamePro'' and produced in-house by a video game company). There ''ElectronicGamingMonthly''), there was very little to separate it from what came later the competition as far as video game magazines went, but in the mid-90s, it shifted into a more comedic, irreverent style with Chris Slate taking over as its Editor. Under Slate, the entire magazine started getting more deliberately wacky, with the game reviewers gaining personality (and faux-personality, with Bill Donohue as an evil dungeon-master and Mike Salmon as a sarcastic ladies-man).

The letters page started with several running gags, with Donohue and the fans building upon each others' jokes, creating new fictional characters and personas, speaking of a "Cleansing" (and later, "The Rinsing"), and promises of world domination and violent reprisals. It was just that kind of a mag -- mostly nonsensical, and all in good fun (and vulgar taste). While ''Game Pro Magazine'' Pro'' was far bigger, and ''EGM'' and ''Diehard Game Fan'' got all the "legit" industry cred, Game Players was a wild and wacky book with running gags, a letters page that was 80% joke-topics (leaving the rest for actual video games), and stands out even today.
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* TakeThat: They were not above knocking crappy systems, and all but called-out various pieces of garbage for their lameness. ''Rise of the Robots'' was a big victim, as was the ''VirtualBoy'' console and the 32X add-on to the ''SegaGenesis''. ''Creator/{{Nintendo}}'' got called out a great deal for their VaporWare that they were known for in the 1990s.

to:

* TakeThat: They were not above knocking crappy systems, and all but called-out various pieces of garbage for their lameness. ''Rise of the Robots'' was a big victim, as was the ''VirtualBoy'' ''UsefulNotes/VirtualBoy'' console and the 32X add-on to the ''SegaGenesis''.''UsefulNotes/SegaGenesis''. ''Creator/{{Nintendo}}'' got called out a great deal for their VaporWare that they were known for in the 1990s.
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Its editors and writers moved on elsewhere -- Chris Slate has had the most success of the group; he would eventually become editor in chief of the now-discontinued ''NintendoPower'', and is now editor in chief of ''Mac Life''. Bill Donohue, who worked with Slate at ''PSM'', still writes ''Jaded Gamer'' columns (they debuted in the ''Ultra'' era), Frank O'Connor eventually wound up at Microsoff in charge of the ''{{Halo}}'' franchise, Chris Charla is running the new XboxOne Independant Developers divsion, Francesca Reyes is editor in chief of ''Official Xbox Magazine'', and Mike Salmon is Director of Research and Planning at 2K Games.

to:

Its editors and writers moved on elsewhere -- Chris Slate has had the most success of the group; he would eventually become editor in chief of the now-discontinued ''NintendoPower'', ''Magazine/NintendoPower'', and is now editor in chief of ''Mac Life''. Bill Donohue, who worked with Slate at ''PSM'', still writes ''Jaded Gamer'' columns (they debuted in the ''Ultra'' era), Frank O'Connor eventually wound up at Microsoff in charge of the ''{{Halo}}'' ''{{Franchise/Halo}}'' franchise, Chris Charla is running the new XboxOne Independant Developers divsion, Francesca Reyes is editor in chief of ''Official Xbox Magazine'', and Mike Salmon is Director of Research and Planning at 2K Games.
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Its editors and writers moved on elsewhere -- Chris Slate has had the most success of the group; he would eventually become editor in chief of the now-discontinued ''NintendoPower''. Bill Donohue, who worked with Slate at ''PSM'', still writes ''Jaded Gamer'' columns (they debuted in the ''Ultra'' era), and many other contributors still work in the video game industry.

to:

Its editors and writers moved on elsewhere -- Chris Slate has had the most success of the group; he would eventually become editor in chief of the now-discontinued ''NintendoPower''. ''NintendoPower'', and is now editor in chief of ''Mac Life''. Bill Donohue, who worked with Slate at ''PSM'', still writes ''Jaded Gamer'' columns (they debuted in the ''Ultra'' era), Frank O'Connor eventually wound up at Microsoff in charge of the ''{{Halo}}'' franchise, Chris Charla is running the new XboxOne Independant Developers divsion, Francesca Reyes is editor in chief of ''Official Xbox Magazine'', and many other contributors still work in the video game industry.
Mike Salmon is Director of Research and Planning at 2K Games.
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'''This magazine contained the following tropes:'''

to:

'''This !!This magazine contained the following tropes:'''
tropes:
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Misleading, as UGP brought back the humor.


As memorable as the magazine's humor was at the time, ''Game Players'' would change again after a few years. 1996 saw the magazine turning into ''Ultra Game Players'', at which point they tried to [[MagazineDecay drop most of the humor and changed a great deal of the staff]]. Their review system, originally based off of Graphics, Sound, Gameplay, Innovation & Replay Value, now exploded into a huge ''eighteen category'' scoring system. This did not go over well; by 1998, the magazine had changed into yet another format under the name of ''Game Buyer''. Four issues later, the magazine collapsed and was shut down.

to:

As memorable as the magazine's humor was at the time, ''Game Players'' would change again after a few years. 1996 saw the magazine turning into ''Ultra Game Players'', at which point they tried to [[MagazineDecay drop most of the humor and changed a great deal of the staff]]. Their review system, originally based off of Graphics, Sound, Gameplay, Innovation & Replay Value, now exploded into a huge ''eighteen category'' scoring system. This did not go over well; by well, so the humor was gradually worked back into the magazine. By 1998, the magazine had changed into yet another format under the name of ''Game Buyer''. Four issues later, the magazine collapsed and was shut down.

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Removed: 101

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* EstrogenBrigadeBait: Reviewer Mike Salmon, especially with his 90s-style long hair and facial hair.


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* MrFanservice: Reviewer Mike Salmon, especially with his 90s-style long hair and facial hair.

Added: 146

Removed: 146

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* IWasYoungAndNeededTheMoney: Their response to a female fan's complaint about Chun-Li's ShowerScene in ''Anime/StreetFighterIITheAnimatedMovie''.



* IWasYoungAndNeededTheMoney: Their response to a female fan's complaint about Chun-Li's ShowerScene in ''Anime/StreetFighterIITheAnimatedMovie''.
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Editing this for some clarity, some \"where are they now\" updating.


''Game Players'' was a video game magazine that had its best years in the mid-[[TheNineties 1990s]]. Starting out as a seemingly-regular game mag (that was actually the very [[NewerThanTheyThink first one]] not devoted to only one system and produced in-house by a video game company). There was very little to separate it from what came later as far as video game magazines went, but in the mid-90s, it shifted into a more comedic, irreverent style with Chris Slate taking over as it's Editor. Under Slate, the entire magazine started getting more deliberately whacky, with the game reviewers gaining personality (and faux-personality, with Bill Donohue as an evil dungeon-master and Mike Salmon as a sarcastic ladies-man).

The letters page started with several running gags, with Donohue and the fans building upon each others' jokes, creating new fictional characters and personas, speaking of a "Cleansing" (and later, "The Rinsing"), and promises of world-takeover and violent reprisals. It was just that kind of a mag -- Mostly nonsensical, and all it good fun (and vulgar taste). While ''Game Pro Magazine'' was far bigger, and ''EGM'' and ''Diehard Game Fan'' got all the "legit" industry cred, Game Players was a wild and whacky book with running gags, a letters page that was 80% joke-topics (leaving the rest for actual video games), and stands out even today.

It was not to last. 1996 saw the magazine turning into ''Ultra Game Players'', at which point they tried to [[MagazineDecay drop all the humour and changed a great deal of the staff]]. Their review system, originally based off of Graphics, Sound, Gameplay, Innovation & Replay Value, now exploded into a huge ''eighteen category'' scoring system. This did not go over well, and by 1998, it had changed into another format as ''Game Buyer'', but four issues later, the entire thing fell and the magazine was shut down.

It's editors and writers would move on elsewhere -- Chris Slate became editor of ''NintendoPower'', Bill Donohue still writes ''Jaded Gamer'' columns (they debuted in the ''Ultra'' era), and many other contributors still deal in the video game industry.

to:

''Game Players'' was a video game magazine that had its best years in the mid-[[TheNineties 1990s]]. Starting out as a seemingly-regular game mag (that was actually the very [[NewerThanTheyThink first one]] not devoted to only one system and produced in-house by a video game company). There was very little to separate it from what came later as far as video game magazines went, but in the mid-90s, it shifted into a more comedic, irreverent style with Chris Slate taking over as it's its Editor. Under Slate, the entire magazine started getting more deliberately whacky, wacky, with the game reviewers gaining personality (and faux-personality, with Bill Donohue as an evil dungeon-master and Mike Salmon as a sarcastic ladies-man).

The letters page started with several running gags, with Donohue and the fans building upon each others' jokes, creating new fictional characters and personas, speaking of a "Cleansing" (and later, "The Rinsing"), and promises of world-takeover world domination and violent reprisals. It was just that kind of a mag -- Mostly mostly nonsensical, and all it in good fun (and vulgar taste). While ''Game Pro Magazine'' was far bigger, and ''EGM'' and ''Diehard Game Fan'' got all the "legit" industry cred, Game Players was a wild and whacky wacky book with running gags, a letters page that was 80% joke-topics (leaving the rest for actual video games), and stands out even today.

It As memorable as the magazine's humor was not to last. at the time, ''Game Players'' would change again after a few years. 1996 saw the magazine turning into ''Ultra Game Players'', at which point they tried to [[MagazineDecay drop all most of the humour humor and changed a great deal of the staff]]. Their review system, originally based off of Graphics, Sound, Gameplay, Innovation & Replay Value, now exploded into a huge ''eighteen category'' scoring system. This did not go over well, and well; by 1998, it the magazine had changed into yet another format as under the name of ''Game Buyer'', but four Buyer''. Four issues later, the entire thing fell and the magazine collapsed and was shut down.

It's Its editors and writers would move moved on elsewhere -- Chris Slate became has had the most success of the group; he would eventually become editor in chief of ''NintendoPower'', the now-discontinued ''NintendoPower''. Bill Donohue Donohue, who worked with Slate at ''PSM'', still writes ''Jaded Gamer'' columns (they debuted in the ''Ultra'' era), and many other contributors still deal work in the video game industry.
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** Their lowest possible rating (below even "Shoot Me") was named after a game called Cosmic Race. They had good reason.

to:

** Their lowest possible rating (below even "Shoot Me") was named after a Japanese PS launch game called Cosmic Race.titled ''Cosmic Race''. They had good reason.
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* KillerApp: Frequent hype was common, despite a relatively-impartial viewpoint. They all but blew their wad with ''VideoGame/BattleArenaToshinden'', calling it literally the "Best Brawler EVER!" on their cover after playing during some Entertainment Expo. Though they were spot-on sometimes (''Tomb Raider'', ''Mario64''), things like that just look more hilarious in retrospect.

to:

* KillerApp: Frequent hype was common, despite a relatively-impartial viewpoint. They all but blew their wad with ''VideoGame/BattleArenaToshinden'', calling it literally the "Best Brawler EVER!" on their cover after playing during some Entertainment Expo. the Japanese version. Though they were spot-on sometimes (''Tomb Raider'', ''Mario64''), ''SuperMario64''), things like that just look more hilarious in retrospect.
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not anymore he doesn\'t


It's editors and writers would move on elsewhere -- Chris Slate now edits ''NintendoPower'', Bill Donohue still writes ''Jaded Gamer'' columns (they debuted in the ''Ultra'' era), and many other contributors still deal in the video game industry.

to:

It's editors and writers would move on elsewhere -- Chris Slate now edits became editor of ''NintendoPower'', Bill Donohue still writes ''Jaded Gamer'' columns (they debuted in the ''Ultra'' era), and many other contributors still deal in the video game industry.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* TakeThat: They were not above knocking crappy systems, and all but called-out various pieces of garbage for their lameness. ''Rise of the Robots'' was a big victim, as was the ''VirtualBoy'' console and the 32X add-on to the ''SegaGenesis''. ''{{Nintendo}}'' got called out a great deal for their VaporWare that they were known for in the 1990s.

to:

* TakeThat: They were not above knocking crappy systems, and all but called-out various pieces of garbage for their lameness. ''Rise of the Robots'' was a big victim, as was the ''VirtualBoy'' console and the 32X add-on to the ''SegaGenesis''. ''{{Nintendo}}'' ''Creator/{{Nintendo}}'' got called out a great deal for their VaporWare that they were known for in the 1990s.
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** FanserviceCover: The final issue of Ultra Game Players (June 1998) featured a swimsuit-clad woman on the cover, as one of the features inside was a long-requested article about the hottest video game babes. Other fanservice-y covers include any cover with [[TombRaider Lara Croft]], and the May 1998 cover, which featured Turok and a bikini babe hanging off him whose face was modeled after Pamela Anderson.

to:

** FanserviceCover: The final issue of Ultra Game Players (June 1998) featured a swimsuit-clad woman on the cover, as one of the features inside was a long-requested article about the hottest video game babes. Other fanservice-y covers include any cover with [[TombRaider [[Franchise/TombRaider Lara Croft]], and the May 1998 cover, which featured Turok and a bikini babe hanging off him whose face was modeled after Pamela Anderson.
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* {{Fanservice}}: Played straight in many ads inside their magazines (an ad for VoltageFighterGowcaizer in one issue was almost beyond belief in this regard), but they weren't above parodying the hell out of it in one article where, in response to a complaint about this trope they took a picture of a woman in a skimpy outfit holding a BFG and did a faux-serious run down of how practical the outfit really was (with tongue firmly in cheek).

to:

* {{Fanservice}}: Played straight in many ads inside their magazines (an ad for VoltageFighterGowcaizer ''VideoGame/VoltageFighterGowcaizer'' in one issue was almost beyond belief in this regard), but they weren't above parodying the hell out of it in one article where, in response to a complaint about this trope they took a picture of a woman in a skimpy outfit holding a BFG and did a faux-serious run down of how practical the outfit really was (with tongue firmly in cheek).
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None


* KillerApp: Frequent hype was common, despite a relatively-impartial viewpoint. They all but blew their wad with ''BattleArenaToshinden'', calling it literally the "Best Brawler EVER!" on their cover after playing during some Entertainment Expo. Though they were spot-on sometimes (''Tomb Raider'', ''Mario64''), things like that just look more hilarious in retrospect.

to:

* KillerApp: Frequent hype was common, despite a relatively-impartial viewpoint. They all but blew their wad with ''BattleArenaToshinden'', ''VideoGame/BattleArenaToshinden'', calling it literally the "Best Brawler EVER!" on their cover after playing during some Entertainment Expo. Though they were spot-on sometimes (''Tomb Raider'', ''Mario64''), things like that just look more hilarious in retrospect.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* IWasYoungAndNeededTheMoney: Their response to a female fan's complaint about Chun-Li's ShowerScene in ''StreetFighterIITheAnimatedMovie''.

to:

* IWasYoungAndNeededTheMoney: Their response to a female fan's complaint about Chun-Li's ShowerScene in ''StreetFighterIITheAnimatedMovie''.''Anime/StreetFighterIITheAnimatedMovie''.
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*SeriesHiatus: The main ''Game Players'' title went on one from October 1991 to June 1993.
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* {{Fanservice}}: Played straight in many ads inside their magazines (an ad for VoltageFighterGowcaizer in one issue was almost beyond belief in this regard), but they weren't above parodying the hell out of it in one article where, in response to a complaint about this trope they took a picture of woman in a skimpy outfit holding a BFG and did a faux-serious run down of how practical the outfit really was (with tongue firmly in cheek).

to:

* {{Fanservice}}: Played straight in many ads inside their magazines (an ad for VoltageFighterGowcaizer in one issue was almost beyond belief in this regard), but they weren't above parodying the hell out of it in one article where, in response to a complaint about this trope they took a picture of a woman in a skimpy outfit holding a BFG and did a faux-serious run down of how practical the outfit really was (with tongue firmly in cheek).
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* {{Fanservice}}: Played straight in many ads inside their magazines (an ad for VoltageFightGowcaizer in one issue was almost beyond belief in this regard), but they weren't above parodying the hell out of it in one article where, in response to a complaint about this trope they took a picture of woman in a skimpy outfit holding a BFG and did a faux-serious run down of how practical the outfit really was (with tongue firmly in cheek).

to:

* {{Fanservice}}: Played straight in many ads inside their magazines (an ad for VoltageFightGowcaizer VoltageFighterGowcaizer in one issue was almost beyond belief in this regard), but they weren't above parodying the hell out of it in one article where, in response to a complaint about this trope they took a picture of woman in a skimpy outfit holding a BFG and did a faux-serious run down of how practical the outfit really was (with tongue firmly in cheek).

Added: 658

Changed: 633

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* FanserviceCover: The final issue of Ultra Game Players (June 1998) featured a swimsuit-clad woman on the cover, as one of the features inside was a long-requested article about the hottest video game babes. Other fanservice-y covers include any cover with [[TombRaider Lara Croft]], and the May 1998 cover, which featured Turok and a bikini babe hanging off him whose face was modeled after Pamela Anderson.

to:

* {{Fanservice}}: Played straight in many ads inside their magazines (an ad for VoltageFightGowcaizer in one issue was almost beyond belief in this regard), but they weren't above parodying the hell out of it in one article where, in response to a complaint about this trope they took a picture of woman in a skimpy outfit holding a BFG and did a faux-serious run down of how practical the outfit really was (with tongue firmly in cheek).
**
FanserviceCover: The final issue of Ultra Game Players (June 1998) featured a swimsuit-clad woman on the cover, as one of the features inside was a long-requested article about the hottest video game babes. Other fanservice-y covers include any cover with [[TombRaider Lara Croft]], and the May 1998 cover, which featured Turok and a bikini babe hanging off him whose face was modeled after Pamela Anderson.


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** Eventually, though, they did notice this was getting out of hand and politely informed fans that yes, most of that crap was funny, but they really needed to cover games sooner or later. Soon after, most of the more absurd writing atrophied away.
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* FanserviceCover: The final issue of Ultra Game Players (June 1998) featured a swimsuit-clad woman on the cover, as one of the features inside was a long-requested article about the hottest video game babes. Other fanservice-y covers include any cover with [[Series/TombRaider Lara Croft]], and the May 1998 cover, which featured Turok and a bikini babe hanging off him whose face was modeled after Pamela Anderson.

to:

* FanserviceCover: The final issue of Ultra Game Players (June 1998) featured a swimsuit-clad woman on the cover, as one of the features inside was a long-requested article about the hottest video game babes. Other fanservice-y covers include any cover with [[Series/TombRaider [[TombRaider Lara Croft]], and the May 1998 cover, which featured Turok and a bikini babe hanging off him whose face was modeled after Pamela Anderson.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* FanserviceCover: The final issue of Ultra Game Players (June 1998) featured a swimsuit-clad woman on the cover, as one of the features inside was a long-requested article about the hottest video game babes. Other fanservice-y covers include any cover with [[Seres/TombRaider Lara Croft]], and the May 1998 cover, which featured Turok and a bikini babe hanging off him whose face was modeled after Pamela Anderson.

to:

* FanserviceCover: The final issue of Ultra Game Players (June 1998) featured a swimsuit-clad woman on the cover, as one of the features inside was a long-requested article about the hottest video game babes. Other fanservice-y covers include any cover with [[Seres/TombRaider [[Series/TombRaider Lara Croft]], and the May 1998 cover, which featured Turok and a bikini babe hanging off him whose face was modeled after Pamela Anderson.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* FanserviceCover: The final issue of Ultra Game Players (June 1998) featured a swimsuit-clad woman on the cover, as one of the features inside was a long-requested article about the hottest video game babes. Other fanservice-y covers include any cover with [[Seres/TombRaider Lara Croft]], and the May 1998 cover, which featured Turok and a bikini babe hanging off him whose face was modeled after Pamela Anderson.

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