About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 47. Chapters: Commodore User, Amstrad Action, Amiga Power, Your Sinclair, Mega, PlayStation Official Magazine, Zzap!64, Amstrad Computer User, Personal Computer World, Crash, Amiga Format, Liverpool Software Gazette, Sega Force, Commodore Format, Commodore Force, Total PC Gaming, Zero, PC Leisure, Sinclair User, Dragon User, Sega Power, Total!, PC Accelerator, Sega Saturn Magazine, ACE, Practical Computing magazine, Page 6, The Micro User, DC-TIPS, Internet Magazine, Atari User, .EXE Magazine, Antic, ST Action, Your Commodore, ST/Amiga Format, ST Format, Sega Pro, Sega Zone, CPC Attack, Acorn User, Input Magazine, Official Dreamcast Magazine, Electron User, Amtix!, Mega Power, Commodore Disk User, Amiga Force, ST Review, Atari ST User, Your Computer, Your 64, Computing Today, PC Extreme, Apricot File, Amiga Computing, MegaTech, Big K, STart Magazine, The Home Computer Advanced Course, Popular Computing Weekly, The Home Computer Course, PC Magazine, 8000 Plus, Amiga Active, Amiga User International, PC Answers, New Computer Express, Amiga Survivor, Internet Advisor, Practical Webdesign, FRED. Excerpt: Amstrad Action was a monthly magazine, published in the United Kingdom, which catered to owners of home computers from the Amstrad CPC range and later the GX4000 console. It was the first magazine published by Chris Anderson's Future Publishing, which with a varied line-up of computing and non-computing related titles has since become one of the foremost magazine publishers in the UK. The publication, often abbreviated to AA by staff and readers, had the longest lifetime of any Amstrad magazine, running from October 1985 until June 1995 and produced 117 issues in total. The magazine was still being published long after the CPC had ceased production and games were no longer available in the shops. Published by Future Publishing, a com...