Dengeki PC Engine Due to an internal struggle in
Kadokawa Shoten near the end of 1992, a group of people split off to create the company MediaWorks on October 15, 1992. The ex-editor of one of Kadokawa's gaming magazines called
Marukatsu PC Engine was one of the former employees to go over to MediaWorks, and one of MediaWorks' first magazines published was with the February 1993 issue on December 26, 1992, based on
Marukatsu PC Engine. The overall title
PC Engine came from the Japanese name for the
TurboGrafx-16 video game console first released by
NEC in 1987, and the magazine was originally intended to be an information source for the console. However, after
NEC Avenue produced a popular
dating sim called
Sotsugyō: Graduation — which
drama CDs,
light novels,
original video animations, and
manga were adapted from — MediaWorks changed the layout of
Dengeki PC Engine to have more coverage on adaptations of games the magazine reported on. A reader-participation game called
Megami Stadium had run in
Marukatsu PC Engine between the May 1992 and January 1993 issues, so starting with the February 1993 issue of
Dengeki PC Engine, MediaWorks created a revival of the game called
Megami Paradise which ran in even-numbered issues up until the June 1996 issue. About a year after MediaWorks started
Megami Paradise,
Marukatsu PC Engine ceased publication on January 30, 1994. That same year in December, the first special edition version of
Dengeki PC Engine called
Dengeki PlayStation was published. The following year,
Dengeki PlayStation broke off to become its own magazine. This was in response to the release of
Sony's
PlayStation video game console in December 1994.
Dengeki G's Engine to present Due to the low popularity of
NEC's
video game console PC-FX, which was the successor to the
PC Engine, MediaWorks decided to change the magazine's title from
Dengeki PC Engine to , with the June 1996 issue on April 30, 1996, which is also when the magazine stopped being a specific magazine for information on games produced by NEC. Instead, the magazine would now contain information on all
bishōjo games as the "G's" in the title stands for both "Gals" and "Games". With the August 1997 issue on June 30, 1997, the magazine's title again changed to . The spelling of the title was slightly altered a final time with the May 2002 issue on March 30, 2002 to be . After running a string of reader-participation games between 1993 and 1998, ''Dengeki G's Magazine
started Sister Princess'' in March 1999; this would prove to make the magazine very popular, and became a major focus of the magazine for several years. Nearly all the magazine's covers between 1999 and 2003 featured characters from
Sister Princess. After overwhelming support for the project, the series was adapted into a two-series anime, and a string of video games; finally, the serialization of the game ending with the September 2003 issue. At the time, the second TV anime adaptation of another of ''Dengeki G's Magazine'
s reader-participation games, Happy Lesson, was just ending, but the series had proved popular. Seeing how popular their reader-participation games could get, MediaWorks continued to create reader-participation games, something the magazine is well known for today. After Sister Princess
ended, the editorial department looked to another reader-participation game which started in the October 2002 issue called Futakoi, and the editors wanted to make this game Dengeki G's Magazine''s next main focus; the game lasted until October 2005. On September 30, 2005, with the November 2005 issue, another magazine published by MediaWorks entitled
Dengeki AniMaga was merged with ''Dengeki G's Magazine
. This caused a massive influx of anime information, and manga and light novels to be serialized in Dengeki G's Magazine
. Following this, G's Magazine
started including more information on adult games starting with the November 2005 issue. Between the March 1999 and October 2005 issues, the cover of G's Magazine
depicted a girl from one of the reader-participation games running at the time. This was changed from November 2005 onwards where now the cover would depict a heroine from a bishōjo game, which were generally adult games. Between the November 2005 and April 2006 issues, the cover of G's Magazine
contained girls from To Heart 2 XRATED and FullAni
, two games released by Leaf at the time. This style was similarly adopted for the issues between May 2006 and October 2006 with girls from Da Capo II, and again between for the issues between November 2006 and March 2007 with girls from Yoake Mae yori Ruriiro na. This style of deciding on the cover art was dropped with the April 2007 issue. With the October 2007 issue, Dengeki G's Magazine
celebrated its 200th consecutive release. Following the release of the May 2014 issue, most of the manga serialized in the magazine were transferred to Dengeki G's Comic''. After 30 years, the magazine ceased publication on October 28, 2022 with the December 2022 issue. ==Features==