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Gamefaqs



         


GameFAQs is a popular website about video games that has helped gamers through "FAQs" and "walkthroughs" for games since November 1995. It was started and is maintained by Jeff "CJayC" Veasey. It has the second largest database of video games on the Internet , second only to IGN. The systems and games range from the 8-bit Atari days to the Next-Gen consoles of today. The site supplies FAQs, guides, images, codes, game saves, reviews, and game data free of charge to anyone who visits the site. Registration opens the extremely active message board community and the ability to contribute.

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GameFAQs culture

GameFAQs is noteworthy for its active message board community. Below are minor descriptions of some its more famous boards:

(Note: Karma is a representation of a user's status. One, and only one, karma can be gained per day if the user logs in.)

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Most well-known

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Less Well-Known

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GameFAQs history

Note: this is NOT a section for history of the boards themselves. This is for an official site history. All others should be linked to below.

GameFAQs was started on 5 November 1995 by Jeff Veasey. At that time it was called the "Video Game FAQ Archive". It was hosted by AOL and was a clone/spin-off of a popular FTP FAQ Archive.

By December 1996, the site was still young, which the appearance and content showed. The site contained less than 1000 FAQs and guides, combined over all systems. The site also focused on the 7 popular systems of the time - arcade games, the Sony Playstation , the Sega Saturn, the Nintendo 64, the 3DO, the Sega Genesis, and the Super Nintendo. Other systems were also listed. The site was very basic and was not updated on a regular basis.

By early 1997, GameFAQs had a new look. In fact, it had two different looks. One was customized for Web browsers that supported frames and the other was made specifically for browsers with no support for frames. The color scheme used white and black and blue. The content, however, was beginning to grow. By April, the site had 1301 files and codes for over 800 games. New features were introduced that would shape GameFAQs - features such as user requests for information, a search engine, recognition for contributors, and others.

By late 1997, GameFAQs was beginning to take shape. It moved out of AOL servers by this time and was partnered with Imagine Games Network (IGN). Jeff Veasey was hard at work on GameFAQs now. It is assumed that this is when GameFAQs became Veasey's full-time job. Until this time, he had been working in either the radio field (unconfirmed report) or with computer programming/web programming (radio interview). GameFAQs made it through two years and a new aspect of the site began - contests. There were only two winners of the GameFAQs Second Birthday Contest out of 1000 entries, but it was a start.

Throughout 1998, GameFAQs had the same idea. Veasey continued to work on the site and put new FAQs and codes up. In late 1998, the site got another overhaul. Still under IGN, GameFAQs added links to other IGN sites. The content of the site wasn't changed much, but Veasey always kept the users informed of what was going on. There were frequent updates to the site, even if they weren't contribution updates.

In late 1999, GameFAQs had another overhaul. The sidebar and tables on the homepage that show top games were added. The color scheme was also changed to blue and white, but it wasn't exactly the same. GameFAQs was still under the flag of IGN.

In November 1999, things happened quickly. On the 5th, a Quick Search box was added to all pages. The site also celebrated its fourth birthday. On the seventh, the opened as a Beta and a Poll of the Day would be put up at the end of that week. Now, the site begins to change from a FAQ archive to one of the best gaming help sites on the internet.

Things on GameFAQs slowed down over the next few months and years. The GameFAQs chat went Beta, but didn't last long due to administrative issues - it was simply too hard to control.

2001 was the next year of changes for GameFAQs. The site left IGN. To make money, a banner was placed on the site that was sold to non-profit organizations. This was changed by May of 2001, when CNET Networks began affiliating themselves with GameFAQs. Also in May 2001, the Chat feature was completely shut down.

In September of 2002, another change was made to GameFAQs, because of advertising changes at CNET. The ad was moved from the top of the page (horizontally) to a vertical position in the sidebar. This also led the way to navigation of systems at the top of the screen. Changes were also made to links on the side, minimizing them and placing more links in "index" pages in subsections.

Recently, around May 2004, GameFAQs underwent the biggest visual change yet. It partially merged its game boards with those of , and radically changed the graphics. The site's webpages have table-less layouts that are powered by CSS. It also converted into a php-based board.

Today, GameFAQs is fully owned by CNET Networks. Jeff "CJayC" Veasey is responsible for working on the main site - e-mails, codes, FAQs, reviews, saves, game data, coding, and updating the homepage. CNET has hired Bethany Massimilla to administrate the GameFAQs message boards and lead the moderators. CNET also supplied new (and faster) servers for the entire site. Although the changeover between the site being run by one man to the site being owned by a company and split into two sections was rough (technical errors, downtime, lost e-mails, and other problems), things have gone for the best, although some people disagree.

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GameFAQs Spinoffs

Many people have created their own site based upon the GameFAQs look and feel. These are commonly referred to as GameFAQs spinoffs.

The first spinoff was called GameFAQs Hell, created by Chuck "NeoGenesis" Sakoda in 2002. His first attempt at cloning the boards were performed in ASP and MS Access database services. After giving up on that, he made a new version in PHP and MySQL. He released the source code under the GNU General Public License. The only copies of the original source known to still exist are versions 0.5.3 and 0.8 (the last official version of GameFAQs Hell), 0.6 and 0.7 were released, but those are assummed to not exist on anyone's hard drive anymore. It has been confirmed by CJayC that he had a link to GameFAQs Hell in the board help section for promotion of the source.

Since the GameFAQs Hell time, there have been dozens of other spinoffs opened up, and more sources appeared. A few of the most famous ones are listed:

Anthony Parsons keeps an for download. It is also available at .

There is a page that was a project to keep a record of all spinoffs created and formed. This page was last updated on April 2004, and is slightly out of date since some boards (like gg's) have been closed. This list is here: .

The history of spinoffs is extremely interesting. A big spinoff, Darkside Legion, was a banned word ("darksidelegion") at GameFAQs after receiving a notorious reputation, because its members were said to contact unsuspecting people and persuade them to give his or her password away. Many Mediarchive-based spinoffs have been hacked by spinoff coders. There has been long-standing tension betweeen Outboards and whiteFyre, the two longest-running spinoffs. Many small spinoffs have been hacked several times, as well as whiteFyre (twice, on 8/8/03 and 8/8/04). The only known sources without major security holes are few and far between. A list of them are AT0 [leaked], Special Ops, and Turkeybot.

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See also

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