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C - Index Page

Below are the Magazines featured on the site.

 

Click an image to take you to the individual Magazine Page.

 

Some of the Magazines will only have pictures as part of a Reference guide.  Others will have the full issue which you can click on to view.

 

If anyone has any of the missing issues or any issue of a Magazine not yet featured on the site and you are willing to share then please get in touch.

 

We are always looking for any type of magazine from any country to build up a comprehensive reference library.

 

Thank you.

Chart Beat Magazine

This has now been moved to the New Magazone site.

click the link below to take you to the new site where you can find the information and read the issues.

New Magazone Site

 

Countdown was a British comic published weekly by Polystyle Publications – ultimately, under several different titles – from 1971 to 1973.

 

The pages in each issue were numbered in reverse order, with page 1 at the end – a gimmick which was derived from the comic's title in order to create a "countdown" to the number one every week.

October 1995 saw the release of Visual Imagination's newest magazine entitled 'Cult Times'.  Cult Times was to focus on the Sci-Fi and Cult programs of the day and the past.

Chart Song Words - Number 29.jpg

Chart Songwords

This has now been moved to the New Magazone site.

click the link below to take you to the new site where you can find the information and read the issues.

New Magazone Site

 

Computer and Video Games was a UK-based video game magazine, published in its original form between 1981 and 2004. Its offshoot website computerandvideogames.com was launched in 1999 

and was closed in February 2015. 

Crash was a magazine dedicated to the ZX Spectrum home computer. It was published from 1984 to 1991 by Newsfield Publications Ltd until their liquidation, and then until 1992 by Europress.

Cult TV Magazine was an off shoot of the SFX Magazine.  

 

Published by Future Publishing, Cult TV was pitched at the nostalgic twenty-somethings who were (apparently) snapping-up old shows (particularly kids shows) on VHS and searching

online for a nostalgia fix.

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