On Fanlore, users with accounts can edit pages including user pages, can create pages, and more. Any information you publish on a page or an edit summary will be accessible by the public and to Fanlore personnel. Because Fanlore is a wiki, information published on Fanlore will be publicly available forever, even if edited later. Be mindful when sharing personal information, including your religious or political views, health, racial background, country of origin, sexual identity and/or personal relationships. To learn more, check out our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Select "dismiss" to agree to these terms.
Mecha Press
Zine | |
---|---|
Title: | Mecha Press |
Publisher: | IANVS Publications |
Organizer(s): | |
Author(s): | |
Cover Artist(s): | |
Illustrator(s): | |
Type: | |
Date(s): | 1991-1995 |
Topic: | |
Medium: | |
Size: | |
Frequency: | |
Fandom: | Mecha anime/manga, gaming and modeling |
Rating(s): | |
Warning(s): | |
Language: | |
External Links: | Wikipedia |
Click here for related articles on Fanlore. | |
Mecha Press was a sister zine to Protoculture Addicts. After its cancelation, the remaining unpublished content was folded back into PA.
Reviews
Lynn Savage reviewed the first issue of Mecha Press in issue #29 of The Rose, praising the zine's Gundam glossary and noting that it was an enthusiastic production, but commenting on a large number of typos.
The target audience is the mecha fanatic. The first issue covers a wide variety of topics that each relates to a segment of the mecha world: introductory gaming systems, rules modifications, novels, animation, characters, and of course, modeling.