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<p class="display-4 text-white">The Videogame Morgue File is a collection of materials intended to give videogames <em>context</em>.</h1>
<p class="display-4 text-white">The '''Videogame Morgue File''' is a collection of materials intended to give videogames <em>context</em>.</h1>
<p class="lead text-white">Our aim is to build an archive of information, links and media that can be of value to researchers of videogame history, bringing scattered, hard-to-find resources into one place.</p>
<p class="lead text-white">Our aim is to build an archive of information, links and media that can be of value to researchers of videogame history, bringing scattered, hard-to-find resources into one place.</p>
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Revision as of 09:57, 2 May 2021

"You don't understand a game by playing it."

The Videogame Morgue File is a collection of materials intended to give videogames context.

Our aim is to build an archive of information, links and media that can be of value to researchers of videogame history, bringing scattered, hard-to-find resources into one place.

Who is this for?[edit]

  • Researchers
  • Academics
  • Journalists
  • YouTubers
  • Anyone else who's interested in a game and wants to learn more about how it was made and how it was received

What's with the name?[edit]

"A morgue file originally was a collection of paper folders containing old files and notes kept by criminal investigators, as well as old article clippings kept by newspaper reporters, in case they became of later use as a quick reference collection."

What belongs here?[edit]

  • Design documents
  • Advertisements
  • Trade press
  • Newspaper clippings
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Talks
  • Histories

In general: if it's relevant to a videogame, and it's not made of code, there's a place for it here.