Echoes of the Atlas
A meditation on loss disguised as an adventure game. The environmental storytelling here rivals anything in the medium, with every crumbling wall and overgrown pathway telling a story about civilization's impermanence.
Independent gaming journalism that captures the culture, creativity, and community shaping our digital worlds
Explore Latest IssueIn an era where gaming has transcended entertainment to become a cultural phenomenon, we believe the stories deserve a platform worthy of their depth. Checkpoint Journal was born from a simple conviction: gaming journalism should mirror the artistry and complexity of the medium it covers.
Our pages are filled with voices from developers working late into the night, players finding community across continents, and the quiet moments that make digital worlds feel real. This is not coverage for algorithms or engagement metrics. This is journalism that respects your time and intelligence.
Sarah Mitchell, Editor-in-Chief
Curated journalism that goes beyond the headline
In-depth features that explore the human stories behind game development, esports culture, and the communities that make gaming meaningful
Authentic visual journalism captured at conventions, studios, and gaming spaces worldwide by our dedicated photo team
No corporate influence, no sponsored content. Just honest journalism funded by readers who value quality over clickbait
Honored with the Digital Publishing Excellence Award 2024 and nominated for Best Independent Gaming Publication
Since launching in 2022, Checkpoint Journal has published quarterly collector's editions that serve as time capsules of gaming culture. Each edition is meticulously curated, featuring commissioned photography, exclusive interviews, and essays that explore gaming's intersection with art, technology, and society.
Our editions are printed on premium paper stock with careful attention to typography and layout, creating physical artifacts that honor the digital worlds they document. We work with independent printers who share our commitment to quality, ensuring every page meets our editorial standards.
What sets our editions apart is the depth of research and access. We spend months developing relationships with developers, players, and industry figures to bring you perspectives you won't find anywhere else. Our writers attend events, visit studios, and immerse themselves in gaming communities to capture authentic stories.
Each edition includes contributions from our network of freelance photographers who document gaming culture worldwide. From intimate portraits of indie developers to sweeping shots of esports arenas, our visual journalism captures the scale and humanity of gaming.
We believe gaming journalism deserves the same care and craft as literary magazines or cultural publications. Our editions are designed to be kept, collected, and revisited. They represent not just news, but a permanent record of this moment in gaming history.
By purchasing our editions, you directly support independent journalism and help us continue producing work that treats games and their communities with the seriousness they deserve. Every sale funds our next investigation, pays our contributors fairly, and proves that thoughtful gaming coverage has an audience.
Collector's issues available for order
Our winter edition explores the rise of cozy gaming, featuring an exclusive interview with the creators behind this year's most meditative indie titles. Plus: a photo essay from Nordic game studios and the story of a grassroots esports league in rural America.
The preservation issue examines efforts to save gaming history, from abandoned MMOs to arcade cabinets. Features investigative reporting on the challenges of digital preservation and profiles of archivists working to protect our cultural heritage.
A special travel issue documenting gaming cafes, arcades, and community spaces across six continents. Our photographers captured the diverse ways people gather around games, from Tokyo's retro game bars to São Paulo's fighting game communities.
The creators issue spotlights game developers, modders, and artists pushing boundaries. Long-form profiles reveal the creative process behind acclaimed indie games and the challenges of making art in a hits-driven industry.
Our inaugural edition launched with a manifesto on gaming journalism and features examining the evolution of speedrunning communities, the architecture of game worlds, and what happens when online spaces become homes.
Critical analysis without the hype
A meditation on loss disguised as an adventure game. The environmental storytelling here rivals anything in the medium, with every crumbling wall and overgrown pathway telling a story about civilization's impermanence.
Ambitious in scope but uneven in execution. The detective mechanics shine during investigations, but the game struggles to balance its noir storytelling with action sequences that feel obligatory rather than organic.
The farming sim grows beyond its influences to create something genuinely fresh. The integration of narrative choices into seasonal cycles means every decision carries weight, and the community you build feels earned.
We spent three months embedded with a small team in Montreal working on their debut title. What emerged was a story about creative compromise, technical problem-solving, and the personal toll of pursuing an artistic vision.
The resulting photo essay and interviews capture the reality of game development away from E3 spotlights and publisher presentations. These are the unsexy hours: debugging sessions at 2 AM, difficult conversations about scope, and the small victories that keep teams going.
View Full GalleryStories from our readers
What started as a weekend gaming session in 2015 has evolved into a monthly tradition. Our group has weathered moves, marriages, and career changes, but we still gather to play together. Games brought us together; friendship keeps us coming back.
At 78, my grandmother decided she wanted to understand my hobby. Six months later, she's optimizing routes in a puzzle platformer and explaining frame-perfect inputs. Age is just a number when you're chasing a personal best.
After losing my job, I spent months building elaborate structures in a sandbox game. What seemed like escapism became therapy. The creative process taught me patience, and sharing my creations online led to freelance opportunities.