Days after Game Informer abruptly closed, former employee Ben Hanson recalled the joy he had working for the iconic Minneapolis-based video game magazine that was widely seen as a beacon for games coverage.
“The impact this magazine had out of that small office in Minneapolis is just incredible,” said Hanson, who worked as a Game Informer video producer from 2010 to 2019.
Hanson spoke with bitterness as well as pride after the news last week that Game Informer’s parent company, GameStop, had decided to shut down the monthly magazine and lay off its 13 employees.
A GameStop executive on the video call did not give a reason for the closure, according to one of the laid-off employees, and GameStop did not respond to a request for comment.
GameStop also shut down the magazine’s website and removed thousands of online articles. Links to its articles now redirect readers to a short “farewell” statement. Many readers and former employees posted on social media that they were furious at GameStop for not preserving the decades of work.
“I’m angry that they did it in such a cruel way and took down the website,” said Hanson. “So much of gaming’s history was lost, just from their ineptitude.”
Andy McNamara, who served as editor-in-chief for more than 27 years, said he was appalled by the headline of the corporate goodbye message, which used the gaming cliché of “The Final Level.”
“Our team would have argued, to the core, with all their passion, about how much they hated that headline,” said McNamara.