My 2 cents worth,
I agree with Slavex,
We could learn alot from the skate magazines. I'm 40 years old and have never been on a skate board but when I leaf through one, for a moment I want to skate.
I don't know anything about running a magazine but I can see that the business side of things may be a challenge. GunGames did fail for some reason. Ultimately, for a high-production quality glossy magazine to succeed, the readership is going to have to be much broader than just active IPSC/IDPA shooters. You need the guy (or girl) who takes their Norinco/Glock/whatever out to the range 3x/year to get stoked about pistol shooting. Also, the people who don't even shoot or own a handgun but see the mag and think it looks cool. Sponsors and advertisers are going to have to be broader than just firearms/ammunition/parts manufacturers - clothing, sports drinks, sunglasses/eyewear. The editorial articles may need to have more lightweight/introductory articles for the novice/nonshooter.
Action shooting has much greater barriers to entry than to get into than skating. Any kid/teen can buy a skate mag, buy a board and go to their local skate park and try to emulate their role models, even if they don't succeed. To get into our sport (in Canada anyways) - you have to take your safety course, get your restricted PAL, take the Black Badge, drop some more money on a suitable gun and gear. That takes some commitment and money but then so does playing hockey or motorcross.
I think that more articles and content for Diligentsia would be great but it isn't the same thing. The people who read it are basically us, active IPSC shooters who don't need convincing that what we do is cool but maybe want more technical information or advanced tips/instruction.
- Andrew