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If you grew up in the '80s and '90s, and even into the early aughts, print strategy guides were a staple of our hobby. They lined the walls and counters of your local games store, had a space in Toys 'R' Us, were promoted in ads, and were even pimped by the hardware manufacturers and developers themselves, most notably Nintendo. Brady, Prima, and even smaller labels like Versus released thousands of print guides, but these days, it's pretty much a dead end. The Internet -- first GameFAQs, then video -- killed the need for them. Yet, there are those of us who still have a fire burning for them (it's how I got my start in the industry, after all). To celebrate print guides -- their vibrant past, irrelevant present, and hopefully-vibrant future -- I invited a strategy guide master to the show. His name is Phil Summers, he's the designer, author, and artist behind Hand-Drawn Game Guides, and he's one of the only people I've ever had the pleasure of meeting who loves the craft as much as I do. Please enjoy as we gush.

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Comments

Dakota Brown

I would totally buy physical game guides if available. I still regret losing my ocarina of time, majora’s mask and wind waker guides. This was a great episode and I really hope both you (Colin) and Phil get your ideas off the ground. I would 100% support!

Jordan Fugate

I moved a few years ago, and once I got settled in my new place I started going through some random boxes I had stored up. One of those boxes contained a few old strategy guides of mine (Ocarina of Time, Resident Evil 4, Wind Waker, Snake Eater, and a few more) and I just sat down and looked through them for a good hour. The nostalgia.

Jeff Caseres

I love guides! started getting into guides in the late PS4 years and now get guides if a game I really love has one. You guys mentioned how video guides are wack and I 100% agree, you are basically just mimicking the video and that is just no good. This episode made me think about how little the Game Help feature on PS5 is being used and it is very sad. I think that could be a great video game guide if used correctly. Elden Ring is a perfect example that could have used it right. Those cards pop up when you are in certain areas of the game you are playing so it would have been cool if you are in Limgrave for example, and the Game Help card you see is little hints of everything you can do in Limgrave. Those cards can do both, text, image, and video. A feature that I am very interested in, but so far have not seen a game that implements it correctly. Great episode Colin and Phil! Keep up the great work!

Jacob

went and flipped through the zelda and metroid guides after listening. that art is absolutely incredible!! the zelda guide specifically is how i always imagined that game would look if graphics had been invented in 1986 haha

Brandon Soto

I remember reading the Paper Mario: Thousand-Year Door GameFaqs guide right before YouTube came out. It’s very nostalgic, but YouTube makes everything much easier.

Anonymous

Awesome interview. Had some difficulty envisioning exactly what a hand drawn guide would even look like, so I checked it out and I must say that I was pleasantly surprised. These are so fun. Would have loved to have had a physical copy for my art book collection. Looking forward to whatever he does next. Great get Colin. These interviews with creators like Sandeep and his Vita Book are some of my favorites.

There’s No I in LLC

Ah damn if only they let this man shine. HIs guides are impeccable.

LastStandMedia

I understand video guides in that it's what's expected today, it's where the money is, and they are sometimes far more practical than written guides. However, I find the written guide -- nine out of 10 times -- to be the way to go.

Anonymous

Idea after listening to the episode. Have him print the last batch and sell exclusively to Last Stand Pateron members

Dylan O'Brien

I absolutely loved this episode. There's nothing that can replace the feeling of having your crisp new strategy guide alongside a game you've been excited to play. Just flipping through the pages and looking at the art and maps was one of my favorite things to do as a kid. I use a lot of video guides on YouTube now but there was a magic to strategy guides that has mostly been lost.

Kurt Lewin

What a great topic and episode. During lockdown here in the UK, I went on a quest to buy the strategy guides for some of my favourite games, some of which are quite rare now. I was really pleased to get the strategy guide for The Orange Box

Ryan Butcher

Great episode. I'm still a fan of guides. Just pre ordered 2 hard cover Elden Ring guides. Happy to see there still out there.

Quinnton from Seattle (edited)

Comment edits

2023-01-05 01:34:49 I grew up in the era of Strategy guides where they started getting expensive. The last one I bought was for Skyrim and it was $45 I believe.
2022-09-03 01:49:50 I grew up in the era of Strategy guides where they started getting expensive. The last one I bought was for Skyrim and it was $45 I believe.

I grew up in the era of Strategy guides where they started getting expensive. The last one I bought was for Skyrim and it was $45 I believe.