Hardcore Gaming 101 is an onlinevideo gamemagazine founded by Kurt Kalata in 2004.[1][2] Kalata established the site after graduating college, when he noticed the overabundance of gamestrategy guides, and felt that someone should create more books aboutgaming history.[3] In its formative years,Hardcore Gaming 101 focused especially ongames from Japan.[4] The site has become known for its in-depth coverage ofclassic games and the history behind them.[3]
Kalata describes his motivations for founding the site, "gaming history is important to me because it's important to analyze how everything is connected to each other. ... New products are always influenced by things that came before it, so it's interesting to trace where certain elements may have come from and to recognize the talents of the trailblazers."[1]
Over the years,Hardcore Gaming 101 has also produced a number of books on specific gaming topics.[1] In 2013, they publishedSega Arcade Classics Volume 1, focused onSega's contributions toarcade gaming.[5] They later publishedThe Best 200 Video Games of All Time, which examines titles that their editorial team felt were important to the history of games.[4] In 2016, they produced a book calledTaito Arcade Classics about the history ofTaito, arcade games, and the gaming industry in japan.[6] This followed with the publication ofThe Unofficial Guide To Konami Shooters, covering a history ofshooter games produced byKonami,[7] as well asData East Arcade Classics about titles fromData East.[8] By 2017,Hardcore Gaming 101 also publishedThe Guide to Shoot Em Ups: Volume 1, which covers classicshoot 'em up titles that were not already covered in their books about Taito or Konami.[9]
Nintendo Life contributor Damien McFarren has called the site "a goldmine for retro gamers, with its staff tirelessly uncovering gems from the past that everyone else has all but forgotten about."[6]The Escapist took note of the site's "exhaustively researched spotlights on games old and new alike",[10] callingHardcore Gaming 101 "a website that should double as the go-to history text for everyone working in the gaming industry."[11]Destructoid similarly said that "the site excels at unearthing gaming trivia unknown to all but the most insanely dedicatedWikipedia moderators", calling the publication a "gem".[12]