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Amstrad Action
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==Features and editorial style== ''AA'' covered both 'games' and 'serious' side of the CPC, maintaining a 50/50 coverage throughout its run. The editorial coverage was always seen as being one of the three main areas; games/leisure, serious (programming, business software etc.), and the regulars, such as 'Amscene', 'Forum', 'Action Test', and 'Cheat Mode'. ; Amscene The latest CPC news regarding all things in the Amstrad world. Later included the games charts and games preview pages. ; Reaction The readers letters were answered in the ''Reaction'' section, where numerous arguments and, usually good natured, humour was found. Later during ''AA''s run the standout letter of the month was highlighted and given the star prize award of Β£25. The technical problems page 'Problem Attic' started out in the Reaction pages in the early years before getting its own space. "If your CPCβs in danger, if you need help, then you can contact the [[The A-Team|AA team]]." ; Action Test The review approach included a main write up, a second opinion box, a good news / bad news comparison list and the percentages. Percentages were given to Graphics, Sonics, Grab Factor, Staying Power and an overall AA Rating. High rated games of 80% and above were given an 'AA Rave' accolade, while the highest rated game of the month received the 'Mastergame' award. This review style continued well into the early 1990s when the award accolades were scrapped. As budget games became more prominent during the CPC's life ''AA'' covered this growing market by including budget reviews in the 'Budget Bonanza' and later 'Action Replay' sections. ; The Pilgrim [[Interactive fiction]] was covered by "The Pilgrim", then "[[Balrog]]" and "The Examiner". The Pilgrim format included the latest adventure game reviews. 'Clue Sniffing With The Pilgrim' included adventure clues and tips. 'Pilgrim Post' was the letters column for adventure game topics. 'Adventure News' detailed the latest happenings in the world of adventure games. ; Forum The Forum carried on from the Problem Attic column where the resident Technical Editor answered reader's hardware or software problems and queries. As space in the magazine became restrictive other features like 'Helpline' and 'Ask Alex' were merged into the new 'Techy Forum'. ; Type-In One long running feature of ''AA'' was the [[Type-in program|Type-In]] section. This included utility, games and demo type-ins sent in by the readers. One had to type in the program code into the computer then run it. The core of this split the readership over whether the programs should be put on the covertape instead - over a six-month period this is what happened, until this practice (and ultimately the Type-Ins section) was abandoned due to space restrictions. ; Helpline The Helpline page was where eager Amstrad readers would offer contact details help fellow readers having problems. It was later merged with Technical Forum. ; Cheat Mode The tips pages included game pokes, tips, cheats and maps all contributed by the readers. ; Aafterthought Initially called Rear View, the back page was where all the loose ends were closed off, like competition winner results and last minute happenings. ; Features As activity in the Amstrad world declined, the editorial staff, and subsequently the editorial content, was constantly being reduced and the magazine adopted an increasingly eccentric style, with one edition in particular featuring an eight-page script for a Christmas pantomime. Later on, a double spread review for the 2nd ''[[Teenage Mutant Hero Turtles]]'' game was split between the review itself and a bizarre transcribed interview between Rod Lawton and Adam Peters (pretending to be one of the turtles). Peters would usually try and promote his band in some way (he featured on the cover of 'music orientated' issue and had one of his techno-MIDI band's songs on the covertape). The magazine is also notable for pioneering the kind of responses β sometimes dry, sometimes surreal, usually humorous and mildly rude β to readers' letters of a form now seen throughout UK gaming magazine culture. These characteristics, for many readers, added to ''AA'''s charm. ===Cover Tapes=== Chris Anderson using his previous success of covermounted cassette tapes with ''[[Personal Computer Games]]'' included one with the Christmas special issue of 1985. This included two unreleased games from [[Ocean Software]]; ''Kung Fu'' and ''Number 1''. The covermount cassette tape was only an occurrence on the Christmas and ''AA'' birthday issues, not becoming a regular feature until AA67 in 1991, mainly due to requests from many readers. Cover-cassettes featured [[game demo]]s, applications, software utilities and, in some instances, complete games. Due to the low quality of the cassettes used many Amstrad owners found them to be unreliable, something which was commonly reflected in the letters pages. One solution to fixing the unreliable tapes as posted to the letters section was to unwind the tape and put a warm iron on it. Later, a utility was released on the covertape to convert the contents to the proprietary 3" disk. ; ''Dizzy'', ''AA'' Special Edition ''[[Codemasters]]'' produced a ''[[Dizzy series|Dizzy]]'' game specially for the ''AA'' birthday covertape in October 1988. This 'Special Edition' included different rooms and objects to explore. ; Action Pack #1 AA67, dated April 1990, came with the first of the permanent cover tapes called Action Pack #1, along with a new cover price of Β£2.20. A playable demo of [[Ocean Software]]'s ''[[Total Recall (video game)|Total Recall]]'' and complete games ''[[Hydrofool]]'' and [[Codemasters]]' ''[[Dizzy - The Ultimate Cartoon Adventure|Dizzy]]'' were included on the tape. ; Action Pack #2 This tape caused some controversy among the readers<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://retroactionmagazine.com/retroactionextra/controversy-how-to-be-a-complete-bastard/|title = Controversy: How to be a Complete Bastard}}</ref> as one of the featured games ''[[How To Be A Complete Bastard]]'' featured mild swearing, plus the game's quest was to be violent and obnoxious throughout a house party. ; ''Stormlord'' Censored December 1993 AA99's Serious Action cover tape included the complete ''Stormlord'' game, albeit a censored version. With the self-censoring of the [[Hewson Consultants|Hewson]] game it seemed that ''AA'' was trying to avoid similar controversy that followed AA68's Action Pack #2.{{Original research inline|date=December 2010}} ; Best Game Ever On Covertape Voted the best game on the CPC, [[Telecomsoft#Firebird|Firebird]]'s ''[[Elite (video game)|Elite]]'' was the complete game given away with the 100th issue's Serious Action cover tape. ===AA Games Accolades=== Initially only the best rated game of the month earned an ''AA Mastergame'' accolade, but from issue 57 this was changed to all games that received a 90% or higher rating. Games receiving 80β90% were awarded an ''AA Rave''. Publishers of CPC games such as [[Activision]], [[Ocean Software|Ocean]] and [[Infogrames]] proudly mounted these awards on their packaging to promote their games to potential customers. The first game to receive a 'Mastergame' award was [[Krome Studios Melbourne|Melbourne House]]'s ''[[The Way of the Exploding Fist]]'', gaining an impressive 94% AA Rating. Issue 38 was the first issue not to award any game the Mastergame accolade. Apparently there were no games worthy of the award that month. The lowest rated Mastergame was ''[[Target Renegade]]'', from [[Imagine Software]], receiving an 86% overall rating. Quite why it was awarded a Mastergame was not explained and remains a mystery. ''[[Laser Squad]]'', by Blade Software, which was mentioned many times as being an ''AA'' staff favourite, was awarded the Mastergame accolade, in AA49, with a 91% rating. March 1990 and the mysterious lost Mastergame that would be ''[[Chase HQ]]''. The [[Ocean Software|Ocean]] [[arcade game]] conversion received a score of 90%, coupled with being the highest rated game this issue. This would normally justify the Mastergame accolade, however the game only got an AA Rave accolade and no explanation or corrections were made since. June 1990 was the first issue to award the Mastergame accolade to more than one game; ''[[E-Motion]]'' by [[U.S. Gold|US Gold]] and ''[[Turrican]]'' by [[Rainbow Arts]] received ratings of 92% and 90% respectively. November 1990 and ''[[Rick Dangerous 2]]'' received the highest rating so far. The MicroStyle game gained a MasterGame award and an AA Rating of 97%. [[Psygnosis]]' ''[[Lemmings (video game)|Lemmings]]'' and [[Ocean Software|Ocean]]'s ''[[The Addams Family (video game)|The Addams Family]]'' were the last games to receive a Mastergame accolade in July 1992's AA82; receiving 97% and 90% respectively. Following issues dispensed with AA Rave and Mastergame accolades. ''[[Lemmings (video game)|Lemmings]]'' joins ''[[Rick Dangerous 2]]'' as gaining the highest ''AA'' rating given during its publication. March 1993's issue 90 featured the first highest rated game not to receive an AA accolade. ''[[Nigel Mansell]]''βs World Championship received an overall rating of 93%, but no accolade of either Rave or Mastergame. The long standing AA signature accolade had been discarded.
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