| In the late 80s, having decided that the Amiga was the way to go, I started accumulating the many
titles that sprung up to support this machine. Apart from the American magazines and the coverage
that had begun to be included in titles such as Commodore Computing International and the ICPUG
newsletter, the field for a dedicated UK periodical was first filled by the Amiga User Group
newsletter which had originated from the staff at (I believe) Cavendish Computer Centre in Leicester.
This was a return to the glorious days of the photocopier though later editions were printed directly.
For the 1987 Commodore Computing Show two new publications were available: a special UK edition
of the Canadian Transactor for the Amiga magazine had been put together with a promise of a regular
UK version coming soon; and a totally new title called Enigma that looked very professional and boasted
several good articles including an interview with R J Mical, one of the original Amiga engineers.
Like many at the show I parted with £20 for a subscription to Enigma but no more issues were
forthcoming as, apparently under the pressure of producing the magazine, the young publisher
later did a runner, skipping the country to avoid having to return the money collected. Enigma
later turned up as an Italian magazine!
Around 1985 CCI magazine started producing an occasional CBM business magazine mainly
catering for the many PC clones that Commodore was producing at the time. It started to
include Amiga coverage and, by 1988, metamorphed into Amiga User International dropping the
PC stuff on the way.
1988 was the boom year for Amiga magazines. Transactor finally appeared (subscription only)
as did Amiga Computing, whose first edition had a somewhat unfinished look as part of the CBM
logo and some other text that should have appeared under the main title was unintentionally
missed off. The other start-up that year was ST/Amiga Format which had the unenviable task of
catering to both the Atari ST and Amiga crowds - both of which tended to snipe at each other
about the various pros and cons of each platform. This title had a cover mounted floppy which
was dual format - e.g. stick it in an Amiga and you saw Amiga programs, stuff it in an ST
and you saw ST programs - this was probably more amazing than you'd imagine as these machines
used completely incompatible disk formats. A year later, rising sales and revenue had
enabled the title to split into two, much to the relief of the readership!
The magazine previously known as VIC Computing and then Commodore User had developed a split
personality calling itself CU 64 and then CU Amiga. Initially very games biased, as belied by
its reliance on the C64 market, it slowly became more mainstream and a serious rival to Amiga
Format and those two were last UK Amiga magazines on the market with CU ending in October 1998
while AF struggled on until May 2000 when the resources used to produce it were transferred
to Linux Format.
In 1991, Future magazines, which produced Amiga Format amongst others, saw a market for
another Amiga title aimed at the more serious user and so Amiga Shopper was born. Its first
issue was a supplement given away with Amiga Format in April as a taster for the full edition
that was published a month later. Like the similarly named Computer Shopper it was initially
produced on cheap paper in order to keep the price down to just 99p. It lasted until 1997.
With Commodore having keeled over and died a messy, prolonged death that lasted throughout 1993
until early 1994 when its maggotty remains were bought up by Escom, you would have thought that no
one in their right minds would have thought of producing a new magazine title dedicated to the
platform. However, that's exactly what did happen as, in June 1994, the first issue of Amiga Pro
appeared. Unsurprisingly, it only lasted a few issues before succumbing, having lost out in
the shrinking market to the already established titles.
For more on both the Amiga computer and the magazines try the
Amiga History Guide.
Okay, so this has been a somewhat biased and patchy history, and I expect it probably missed
out many of your favourite mags (like Zapp 64 or Amiga Power, especially if you are a gamer - which
I'm not). But, for the younger generation out there, it should give a small idea of what
the UK computer magazine market was like back in the dim and distant past! For more
information on any of those magazines just try Googling.
|