Today’s Video Game History Foundation has announced an early approach to digital archives, including magazines, catalogs, and behind -the -scenes content, and is free to access it for free. VGHF has more than 1,500 searchable video game magazines and is not currently printed. You can also check industrial trade magazines that the general public rarely see.
A particular point among these files is that VGHF is called Mark Flitman papers. Flitman is a retired game producer with a number of companies, including Konami, Acclaim, Midway and Mindscape. He has allowed VGHF to digitize more than 20 years of data for descendants, and he secretly gave viewers secretly in game development scenes in the late 90’s and early 2000s.
Fans Mist You can also find more than 100 hours of video in the series production, including the original FMV content. Mist Documentary.
During the video game conservation crisis, the release of this digital archive makes it easier to use one of the most popular entertainment in the world. There are some things for everyone, such as the first 100 cd of GamePro Magazine Archives and the first 12 years of E3.
The mission of the Video Game Historical Foundation is to bring about the video game history to “back back.” Nonprofit organizations collect and collect promotional materials and educational manuals for research libraries, but VGHF wants to preserve the original source code for many games as possible.
Video Game History Foundation has provided many collections for free. There is no claim that you can access publicly. You can also request certain materials, but the team warns that the response can be slow because the demand is high after launch.
Unfortunately, you can’t play video games in the archive. The US Copyright Act shares the file in a dark area, but VGHF says, “We are fighting to change this law in cooperation with the software preservation community.”