Magazine Covers
Each month had a title, e.g. "The Rainbow Issue", "The First Issue". These are listed where known.
- February 2003: Dead or Alive: Extreme Beach Volleyball - "The First Issue"
- March 2003: Xenosaga - "The Chewy issue"
- April 2003: Zone of the Enders - "The Metal issue"
- May 2003: Auto Modellista - "The Speed issue"
- June 2003: World of Warcraft, Star Wars Galaxies - "The Wired issue"
- July 2003: Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater - "The Jungle issue"
- August 2003: Ninja Gaiden - "The Masked issue"
- September 2003: Soul Calibur II - "The Kick A** Issue"
- October 2003: F-Zero GX - "The Future Issue"
- November 2003: SSX 3 - "The Frosted Issue"
- December 2003: Tony Hawk's Underground - "The Flipped Issue"
- January 2004: Rainbow Six 3, Ninja Gaiden - "The Creepy Issue"
- February 2004: Darkwatch - "The Dead Issue"
- March 2004: Star Wars: Republic Commando - "The Space Issue"
- April 2004: Astro Boy - "The Anime Issue"
- May 2004: Nina: Death By Degrees - "The Women Issue"
- June 2004: Onimusha 3 - "The Samurai Issue"
- July 2004: Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories - "The magic issue"
- August 2004: Everquest 2, Monster Hunter, Final Fantasy XI: Chains of Promathia, The Matrix Online - Four different covers, "The Online World issue"
- September 2004: Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas - "The Sandbox Issue"
- October 2004: Fable, Dead or Alive Ultimate - Two different covers, "The Hot Pink Issue"
- November 2004: Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door - "the it's a-me issue"
- December 2004: Need For Speed Underground 2, - "The nitro issue"
- January 2005: Halo 2 - "The FPS Issue"
- February 2005: Resident Evil 4 - "The last issue"
Read more about this topic: GMR (magazine)
Famous quotes containing the words magazine and/or covers:
“The Husband of To-Day ever considers his wife but as a portion of his my-ship.
Nominative I.
Possessive My, or Mine.
Objective Me.
This is the grammar known to the Husband of To-Day.”
—Anonymous, U.S. womens magazine contributor. The Revolution (June 24, 1869)
“And so we ask for peace for the gods of our fathers, for the gods of our native land. It is reasonable that whatever each of us worships is really to be considered one and the same. We gaze up at the same stars, the sky covers us all, the same universe compasses us. What does it matter what practical systems we adopt in our search for the truth. Not by one avenue only can we arrive at so tremendous a secret.”
—Quintus Aurelius Symmachus (A.D. c. 340402)