: Created in 1995 as a "joke" by underground journalist Yoshihisa Kurosawa, it was sold via mail-order and is estimated to have sold only about 30 physical copies.
"It feels like we're printing a death certificate," Sarah whispered, leaning over his shoulder. She was the magazine’s lead photographer, her hair still damp from a day spent documenting the dismantling of British crests from government buildings.
, sold via mail order for the Super Famicom floppy disk copier devices. Recent Resurgence
In the realm of retro gaming and niche collecting, few artifacts are as simultaneously notorious and mysterious as Hong Kong 97 . While often discussed in the context of the notoriously "bad" Super Famicom game of the same name, the associated magazine (and the cultural context surrounding it) represents a fascinating slice of 1990s media history.
: Created in 1995 as a "joke" by underground journalist Yoshihisa Kurosawa, it was sold via mail-order and is estimated to have sold only about 30 physical copies.
"It feels like we're printing a death certificate," Sarah whispered, leaning over his shoulder. She was the magazine’s lead photographer, her hair still damp from a day spent documenting the dismantling of British crests from government buildings. hong kong 97 magazine new
, sold via mail order for the Super Famicom floppy disk copier devices. Recent Resurgence : Created in 1995 as a "joke" by
In the realm of retro gaming and niche collecting, few artifacts are as simultaneously notorious and mysterious as Hong Kong 97 . While often discussed in the context of the notoriously "bad" Super Famicom game of the same name, the associated magazine (and the cultural context surrounding it) represents a fascinating slice of 1990s media history. , sold via mail order for the Super