Like most magazines,
GameNOW features many recurring sections. These included:
Regular sections • Rants & Raves -
GameNOW's letters section was popular among its readers for its humorous and sarcastic tone.
GameNOW wasn't afraid to poke fun at its readers, and many readers would write in hoping to be "zinged" in the pages of the magazine. Rants & Raves was home to several inside jokes among
GameNOW's readership, including the frequent use of a particular screenshot from the PlayStation game
Final Fantasy VIII. •
GameNOW Gallery - A two-page spread that focused on showing large screenshots and character artwork from upcoming games. This section is notable for featuring a spread highlighting
Rare's original character designs for
Joanna Dark in
Perfect Dark Zero (issue #15, January 2003) and a spread showing several screenshots from the unreleased GBA game
Shantae Advance (issue #25, November 2003). • Hot 10 - A previews section that counted down the top ten best games coming out each month. • Now Playing -
GameNOW's review section. The magazine's review scale was much like a school's report card, with grades ranging from A+ to F. A C grade denoted that the game was average. • The A+ Club - A section that called special attention to all the games that received
GameNOW's highest review score, an A+. • The F Troupe - The polar opposite of The A+ Club. This section called out every game that received
GameNOW's lowest score, an F. The F Troupe's mascot was Poo, an anthropomorphic piece of cartoon poop that the
GameNOW editors created in the PlayStation 2 game
Magic Pengel. • Tricks Now - A multi-page section near the back of the magazine that contained cheat codes for the latest games. • Animal Crossing Bulletin Board - A small feature than ran within the Tricks Now section from issue #14 (December 2002) to issue #25 (November 2003). It featured strategies for the Nintendo GameCube game
Animal Crossing and original patterns that could be recreated with the game's pattern designer. Among the custom patterns were the
GameNOW logo and a recreation of
GameNOW's legendary
Final Fantasy VIII screenshot.
Fan Club When
GameNOW began, Fan Club was the name of the letters section that ran in the back of the magazine. Starting with issue #4 (February 2002), the Fan Club section was expanded to include regular (and often humorous) mini-features in addition to the reader mail. In issue #14 (December 2002), the letters section was moved to the front of the magazine and renamed Rants & Raves. The mini-features were retained in the now expanded Fan Club section in the back of the magazine. Among the regular mini-features were: • Top Ten - Although these top ten lists were often played straight by counting down the top ten games in a specific series or genre, there were occasional lists that were made for laughs. • Crap from the Past - Poked fun at terrible older video games. • Hot or Not - A lighthearted look at what the editors were into that month. • Gamerdex - Inspired by the
Pokédex from
Nintendo's
Pokémon series, this section highlighted a different type of gamer, including an illustration of the gamer. • Gaming Evolution - Took a video game character or series and traced its evolution from its humble beginnings to its current success. The section also made note of the subject's most embarrassing moments. • Fan Letter Art - Envelope art sent in by the
GameNOW readers. • $10 Treasures - Discussed discount games available for the PlayStation. • Giuseppe Contelli's What If? - A spotlight for long-time
EGM²,
Expert Gamer, and
GameNOW reader Giuseppe Contelli's nonsensical "What If" scenarios. A prime example: What if Bullet Bill did attract Joanna Dark and she reads the inscription, "I am in love with yours" on him? • Cool Job - A short interview with video game industry insiders where they explained what their job involved and how they got it. A notable interview subject was
Charles Martinet, Nintendo's voice of
Mario. • Super Lucky Love Love Japan - A section that highlighted import games, anime-based games, and
anime. This section is an evolved version of the old feature, Super Lucky Imports. •
Game Critter Super-Squad! - A comic strip by cartoonist
Jeremy "Norm" Scott, the creator of
Hsu and Chan (of which GCSS was a spin-off). ==April Fools==