Acceptable-to-Good overall condition (see pictures). Issues are complete, clean, and have shelf wear, such as spine creases. Please note that these vintage magazines may show yellowing on pages, a typical sign of their age. They were purchased from various US comic stores that treated them like loose magazines, accounting for the condition.

Lot of 3 RARE issues of "Dream Watch Bulletin (DWB)" fanzine (published 1992) in black & white and color. #101 has 48 pages, #102 has 24 pages, #103 has 28 pages (including covers).

Contents for 101 include:
Save Who Campaign Drops Legal Action.
Defrosting The tomb - Review of the video release.
Reel Action - Behind The Scenes look at the first filmed season of The Avengers.
Ian Stuart Black's The Savages photonovel starring William Hartnell.
Red Dwarf - How has the show changed over the five series?
Star Trek The Next Generation - Season 5 episode guide: eps 1 - 3.
Robin Of Sherwood - Returning?
Brian Croucher - Interview.

Contents for 102 include:
News, Letters, Sapphire & Steel, The Death of Television, Star Trek Next Generation episode guide, The Avengers, Ace's Low, reviews.

Contents for 103 include:
News: BBC Trek Blow - seasons 4 and 5 of Next Gen lost to Sky until
'94.
The Daemons - BBC have completed colour restoration project.
Space Police - New Gerry Anderson project underway.
The Mark of Destruction - Ian Levine on the missing episodes of Doctor Who (part 1).
Nicholas Young - The actor who played John in the Tomorrow People gives DWB an interview.
Kolchak: The Night Stalker - Episode guide.
Star Trek The Next Generation - Season 5 episode guide, eps 7 and 8
Review: Daleks and Cybermen - The Early Years tapes.
Review: Blake's 7 - Power / Traitor video release.
Cat's Cradle: Witch Mark - Review of the New Adventures novel by Andrew Hunt.
An Evening With Gerry Anderson.


Doctor Who Bulletin, also known as DWB, DreamWatch Bulletin or DW Bulletin, was a Doctor Who fanzine first published in July 1983 by Gary Levy (later known as Gary Leigh).

The publication became well known for its often overtly critical attitude towards the Doctor Who series (and then-incumbent producer John Nathan-Turner), particularly in comparison with contemporary issues of either the DWAS newsletter Celestial Toyroom or Marvel Comics’ Doctor Who Monthly—both of which were required to maintain good working relationships with the Doctor Who Production Office and the BBC's then commercial wing, BBC Enterprises.

From 1989, in order to help secure wider distribution through specialist science fiction bookshops, the publication widened its editorial coverage to include other genre films and television shows, such as Star Trek: The Next Generation, Red Dwarf, Babylon 5, The Prisoner, and The X-Files. The retitled DreamWatch Bulletin (enabling the retention of the symmetrical dwb logo) continued until 1994, when the publication was relaunched (with numbering reverting to issue 1) as the nationally-distributed Dreamwatch magazine.