Difference between revisions of "WACCI"

From CPCWiki - THE Amstrad CPC encyclopedia!
Jump to: navigation, search
(Covers)
(Covers)
Line 72: Line 72:
 
Image:Wacci 059.jpg|Issue 059
 
Image:Wacci 059.jpg|Issue 059
 
Image:Wacci 060.jpg|Issue 060
 
Image:Wacci 060.jpg|Issue 060
 +
Image:Wacci 061.jpg|Issue 061
 +
Image:Wacci 062.jpg|Issue 062
 +
Image:Wacci 063.jpg|Issue 063
 +
Image:Wacci 064.jpg|Issue 064
 +
Image:Wacci 065.jpg|Issue 065
 +
Image:Wacci 066.jpg|Issue 066
 +
Image:Wacci 067.jpg|Issue 067
 +
Image:Wacci 068.jpg|Issue 068
 +
Image:Wacci 069.jpg|Issue 069
 +
Image:Wacci 070.jpg|Issue 070
  
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>

Revision as of 11:52, 1 May 2008

The CPC's longest-running fanzine and user group, WACCI was based in Britain and catered mostly for serious users.

Its acronym has never been satisfactorily explained.

According to Jeff Walker, who was the original founder.

He had always thought that name would be good for a magazine and used it without any intention of it being an acronym at all.

(The official WACCI explanation is that it stood for World Amstrad Computer Club International)

As well as a (more or less) regular magazine, WACCI also provided a PD library (of mostly CP/M software) and a 'homebrew' library.

Some of the CPC's best writers, such as Auntie John, were contributors to early WACCIs.

However, the decline in serious use of the CPC inevitably led to a petering out of publication.

The last issue was summer 2003, issue 140.

Though WACCI was solely a paper fanzine, a spin-off disczine, EuroWACCI, existed for six issues.

WACCI editors

Covers

Links