Noun
zine (plural zines)
A low-circulation, non-commercial publication of original or appropriated texts and images, especially one of minority interest.
A board game (of sorts) variant has been developed by web developer Kevan Davis and its rules are available on his website. citation The deduction game A deduction game of the same name was created in 1991 by David Tittle in the play-by-mail zine Smodnoc. Source: Internet
Beneath the Underground (1992) is a collection of texts relating to what Black calls the "marginals milieu"—the do-it-yourself zine subculture which flourished in the 80s and early 90s. Source: Internet
Arm first used the term in 1981, when he wrote a letter under his given name Mark McLaughlin to the Seattle zine Desperate Times, criticizing his own band Mr. Epp and the Calculations as "Pure grunge! Source: Internet
Carla and I conceived of it as a print zine in 1987. Source: Internet
By 2000, when web publishing of stories became more popular than zine publishing, thousands of media fanzines had been published; citation over 500 of them were k/s zines. Source: Internet
In 1977 in Australia, Bruce Milne and Clinton Walker fused their respective punk zines Plastered Press and Suicide Alley to launch Pulp; Milne later went on to invent the cassette zine with Fast Forward, in 1980. Source: Internet