: Because selling unlicensed software and copy devices was illegal in Japan, Kurosawa wrote under various pen names to evade authorities.
A Cantonese-language publication from 1997 with no direct tie to the game. Game Urara hong kong 97 magazine work
This paper examines the short-lived British comic magazine Hong Kong 97 (published by HARRIER Comics, 1996–1998) as a cultural artifact reflecting late-colonial British perspectives on the impending handover of Hong Kong to China. Through content analysis of its primary recurring series ( Kowloon Kid , The Banker , Ghosts of the Peak ) and editorial cartoons, the paper argues that the magazine functioned as a site of postcolonial anxiety, orientalism, and nostalgic imperialism. It contrasts British-creator portrayals with contemporaneous Hong Kong independent comics (e.g., Teddy Boy by Lee Chi-ching) to highlight divergent narratives. : Because selling unlicensed software and copy devices
Most monthly magazines had a hard close on June 28th to hit newsstands by July 5th. The problem? The most important events (the handover ceremony and the arrival of President Jiang Zemin Through content analysis of its primary recurring series
Producing a magazine during the handover week (June 25 – July 2, 1997) was a feat of military precision. Let’s break down what actually looked like on the ground.