Home of the Underdogs (German Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Home of the Underdogs" in German language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank German rank
1,438th place
3,297th place
1st place
1st place
33rd place
2nd place
23rd place
98th place
low place
low place
401st place
1,322nd place
2,126th place
5,734th place
low place
low place
1,518th place
2,150th place
68th place
29th place
193rd place
559th place

escapistmagazine.com

europa.eu

cordis.europa.eu

fringer.org

groups.google.com

homeoftheunderdogs.net

kotaku.com

redirecter.toolforge.org

  • Marc Saltzman: Flashbacks For Free: The Skinny On Abandonware. gamespot.com, 2002, archiviert vom Original am 14. Dezember 2005; abgerufen am 29. Dezember 2012 (englisch): „By day, 28-year-old Sarinee Achavanuntakul is an investment banker in Hong Kong, but by night, she runs the infamous Home of the Underdogs, a Web site she founded three and a half years ago, and receives an average of more than 30,000 unique visitors per day. According to Achavanuntakul, the purpose of starting Home of the Underdogs was simple: to preserve out-of-print games that publishers no longer support, to keep them from falling into oblivion, and to honor other underrated games, including freeware games and recent commercial titles that might have been poor sellers.

rockpapershotgun.com

twitter.com

web.archive.org

  • Marc Saltzman: Flashbacks For Free: The Skinny On Abandonware. gamespot.com, 2002, archiviert vom Original am 14. Dezember 2005; abgerufen am 29. Dezember 2012 (englisch): „By day, 28-year-old Sarinee Achavanuntakul is an investment banker in Hong Kong, but by night, she runs the infamous Home of the Underdogs, a Web site she founded three and a half years ago, and receives an average of more than 30,000 unique visitors per day. According to Achavanuntakul, the purpose of starting Home of the Underdogs was simple: to preserve out-of-print games that publishers no longer support, to keep them from falling into oblivion, and to honor other underrated games, including freeware games and recent commercial titles that might have been poor sellers.

wired.com