GameStar was founded by Charles Glimm, Jörg Langer und Toni Schwaiger with the
IDG Entertainment Media GmbH as publisher and debuted in September 1997, with Jörg Langer as editor-in-chief. The new magazine soon gained a lot of popularity. By the fourth quarter of 1999 it sold about 333,000 issues per month, in 2000 it overtook competitor
PC Games as the largest German language videogames magazine in Europe. IDG also started
GameStar sister magazines in Italy, Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic and the United States. The US version was, quite differently from the rest, positioned as a magazine for adults, about PC and console games, similar to
inCite. However they all folded after a few months due to disappointing sales. The only long term launch was achieved in Hungary. In 2005,
GameStar spawned a sister magazine called
/GameStar/dev which is targeted at European Game Developers.
GameStar also has a sister magazine named
GamePro, which focuses on console games. Incidentally its headquarters are right next-door to the
GameStar office. In April 2015
GameStar and its sister magazine
GamePro were sold by IDG to the French publisher
Webedia.
GameStar also held a popular known E-Sports-League, the
GameStar Clanliga, featuring games such a
Warcraft III,
Counter-Strike as well as
Tactical Ops. == Sales and popularity ==