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Games Workshop

Games Workshop Group (often abbreviated as GW) is a British manufacturer of miniature wargames, based in Nottingham, England. Its best-known products are Warhammer and Warhammer 40,000.

Games Workshop Group plc
Games Workshop headquarters in Nottingham
TypePublic limited company
IndustryMiniature wargaming
Founded1975; 48 years ago (1975) in London, England
Founder
HeadquartersNottingham, England
Key people
  • Nick Donaldson (Non-Executive Chairman)
  • Kevin Rountree (CEO)
Products
Revenue £386.8 million (2022)[1]
£157.1 million (2022)[1]
£128.4 million (2022)[1]
Subsidiaries
Websitewww.warhammer.com

Founded in 1975 by John Peake, Ian Livingstone and Steve Jackson, Games Workshop was originally a manufacturer of wooden boards for games including backgammon, mancala, nine men's morris and Go. It later became an importer of the U.S. role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons, and then a publisher of wargames and role-playing games in its own right, expanding from a bedroom mail-order company in the process. It expanded into Europe, the US, Canada, and Australia in the early 1990s. All UK-based operations were relocated to the current headquarters in Lenton, Nottingham in 1997.

It started promoting games associated with The Lord of the Rings film trilogy in 2001. It also owns Forge World (which makes complementary specialist resin miniatures and conversion kits). It is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 250 Index.

History edit

Early years edit

Founded in 1975 at 15 Bolingbroke Road, London by John Peake, Ian Livingstone and Steve Jackson (not to be confused with U.S. game designer Steve Jackson), Games Workshop was originally a manufacturer of wooden boards for games including backgammon, mancala, nine men's morris, and Go.[2] It later became an importer of the U.S. role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons, and then a publisher of wargames and role-playing games in its own right, expanding from a bedroom mail-order company in the process.[3]

 
Cover of White Dwarf Issue #1, June/July 1977

In order to promote their business and postal games, create a games club, and provide an alternative source for games news, the newsletter Owl and Weasel[4] was founded in February 1975. This was superseded in June 1977 by White Dwarf.[5]

From the outset, there was a clear, stated interest in print regarding "progressive games", including computer gaming,[6] which led to the departure of John Peake in early 1976, who preferred "traditional games" (such as backgammon). The loss of Peake also meant the loss of the fledgling company's main source of income.[7] However, having successfully obtained official distribution rights to Dungeons & Dragons and other TSR products in the UK, and maintaining a high profile by running games conventions, the business grew rapidly. It opened its first shop in April 1978.[8]

 
Games Workshop opening day at 1 Dalling Road, Hammersmith, London, in April 1978.[9][10][11]

In late 1978 Games Workshop provided the funding to co-found Citadel Miniatures in Newark-on-Trent. Citadel would produce the metal miniatures used in its role-playing games and tabletop wargames. The "Citadel" name became synonymous with Games Workshop Miniatures, and continues to be a trademarked brand name used in association with them long after the Citadel company was absorbed into Games Workshop.[12][13] For a time Gary Gygax promoted the idea of TSR, Inc. merging with Games Workshop, until Steve Jackson and Ian Livingstone backed out.[14]

The company's publishing arm also released UK reprints of American RPGs such as Call of Cthulhu, Runequest, Traveller and Middle-earth Role Playing, which were expensive to import (having previously done so for Dungeons & Dragons since 1977).[15]

In 1984 Games Workshop ceased distributing its products in the U.S. through hobby games distributors and opened its Games Workshop (U.S.) office. Games Workshop (U.S.), and Games Workshop in general, grew significantly in the late 1980s, with over 250 employees on the payroll by 1990.[16]

Refocus edit

Tom Kirby became General Manager in 1986.[17] Following a management buyout by him and Bryan Ansell in December 1991, when Livingstone and Jackson sold their shares for £10 million,[18] Games Workshop refocused on their miniature wargames Warhammer Fantasy Battle (WFB) and Warhammer 40,000 (WH40k), their most lucrative lines. The retail chain refocused on a younger, more family-oriented market. The change of direction was a great success and the company enjoyed growing profits, but the more commercial direction of the company made it lose some of its old fan base. A breakaway group of two company employees published Fantasy Warlord in competition with Games Workshop, but the new company met with little success and closed in 1993. Games Workshop expanded in Europe, the US, Canada and Australia, opening new branches and organising events in each new commercial territory. Having been acquired by private equity firm ECI Partners the company was floated on the London Stock Exchange in October 1994.[19][20] In October 1997 all UK-based operations were relocated to the current headquarters in Lenton, Nottingham.[21]

The company diversified by acquiring Sabretooth Games (card games), creating the Black Library (literature), and working with THQ (computer games).[22]

 
A Games Workshop store in Düsseldorf, Germany, pictured in 2009

In late 2009 Games Workshop issued a succession of cease and desist orders against various Internet sites it accused of violating its intellectual property generating anger and disappointment from its fan community.[23][24]

On 16 May 2011, Maelstrom Games announced that Games Workshop had revised the terms and conditions of their trade agreement with independent stockists in the UK. The new terms and conditions restricted the sale of all Games Workshop products to within the European Economic Area.[25]

On 16 June 2013, WarGameStore, a UK-based retailer of Games Workshop products since 2003, announced further changes to Games Workshop's trade agreement with UK-based independent stockists.[26]

Tom Kirby stepped down in 2017.[27]

In July 2021, Games Workshop made changes to their IP guidelines, adopting a "zero tolerance" stance towards fan-made games, videos and animations, drawing criticism from fans.[28][29][30]

The presence of Games Workshop in the East Midlands has led the region to become the centre of the wargames industry in the UK, known as the lead belt with numerous other companies founded by former employees.[31]

Operations edit

Licensing edit

Alongside the UK publishing rights to several American role-playing games in the 1980s (including Call of Cthulhu, Runequest[32] and Middle-earth Role Playing,[33]) Games Workshop also secured the rights to produce miniatures or games for several classic British science fiction properties such as Doctor Who[34][35] and several characters from 2000 AD including Rogue Trooper and Judge Dredd.[36] Alongside the rights to reprint Iron Crown Enterprises' Middle-earth Role Playing, Citadel Miniatures acquired the rights to produce 28 mm miniatures based on The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit.[37]

In conjunction with the promotion of The Lord of the Rings film trilogy in 2001, Games Workshop acquired the rights to produce a skirmish wargame and miniatures, using the movies' production and publicity art, and information provided by the original novels by J.R.R. Tolkien. A 25 mm scale was used.[38] The rights to produce a role-playing game using the films' art and both the book and the movies' plots and characters were sold to another firm, Decipher, Inc. Games Workshop also produced a Battle of Five Armies game based on a culminating episode in The Hobbit, using 10 mm scale.[39]

On 10 February 2011 Warner Bros. Consumer Products announced that it had extended its six-year agreement with Games Workshop, continuing its exclusive, worldwide rights to produce tabletop games based on "The Hobbit" and "The Lord of the Rings." Games Workshop announced plans to expand their offerings of battle-games and model soldiers, and to continue to develop and increase offerings based on J.R.R. Tolkien's fantasy books.[40]

Group divisions edit

Games Workshop has expanded into several divisions/companies producing products related to the Warhammer universe.

  • Forge World makes specialist resin miniatures and conversion kits for Games Workshop's titles as well as its Specialist Games range. Forge World was also responsible for the Warhammer Historical line of historical wargames rules, including Warhammer Ancient Battles, all of which were previously published by as a component of Black Library.[41] In August 2018, Forge World announced substantial changes to its U.S. pricing model in exchange for faster and less costly shipping services to the United States.[42] As of 31st November 2023, the Forge World website was made defunct as part of the company merger under the banner name "Warhammer" in one website, the resin kits sold were also marked as "Advance model kits" with an age rating attached [43]
  • BL Publishing was the fiction, board game and roleplaying game publishing arm of Games Workshop. They comprised several separate imprints; Black Library, Black Flame and Solaris Books. Warp Artefacts used to produce merchandise based on Games Workshop's intellectual property; they are now folded into BLP as BL Merchandise.[44]

The company has hard-to-reproduce, unique intellectual property, and a good export record. Sales slowed around 1999-2000 due to supply chain issues, but quickly rebounded a few years later.[45]

Miniature games edit

Games Workshop previously produced miniature figures via an associated, originally independent, company called Citadel Miniatures while the main company concentrated on retail. The distinction between the two blurred after Games Workshop stores ceased to sell retail products by other manufacturers, and Citadel was effectively merged back into Games Workshop.[46]

Current core games edit

The following games were in production as of 2023:

Other games edit

The following games were in production as of 2021:[48]

  • Adeptus Titanicus – A new version of the original game (released 2019).
  • Aeronautica Imperialis – Aerial combat game, updated from the Forge World version (released 2019).
  • Blood Bowl – an American football style game using fantasy creatures. Originally released in 1986, it was revived in 2016 with a "Second Season Edition" in 2020.
  • Legiones Imperialis - a war game set during the Horus Heresy, in the Warhammer 40,000 universe, Legiones Imperialis is a revitalized version of Epic 40,000.
  • Necromunda – a skirmish game set on a hive world which pits gangs of humans against each other, using modified 2nd edition Warhammer 40,000 rules, which are more detailed than newer editions and more suitable for skirmish games. Originally printed in 1995, it was revived at the end of 2017.
  • Warcry – A skirmish game set in the Age of Sigmar universe (new edition released 2022).
  • Warhammer 40,000: Kill Team - A skirmish version of Warhammer 40,000, using the same factions and units (new edition released 2021).
  • Warhammer: Underworlds – A game set in the Age of Sigmar setting combining miniature gaming and deck-building (released 2017).

Out of print edit

Warhammer Age of Sigmar universe edit

  • Warhammer Quest: Shadows over Hammerhal (released 2017)[49] - dungeon crawl game in the Warhammer: Age of Sigmar universe. Despite sharing the Warhammer Quest brand, rules and setting are completely different from the original game.

Warhammer Fantasy universe edit

  • Advanced HeroQuest
  • Kerrunch – a simplified version of Blood Bowl.
  • Man O' War – a game of naval combat in a fantasy world. Two expansions were also released, Sea of Blood and Plague Fleet.
  • Mighty Warriors – a simplified version of Advanced HeroQuest. More of a light Skirmish game using AHQ minis set in a dungeon.
    • Dragon Masters – a board game which played like a simplified version of Mighty Empires, in which players take the role of competing Elven princes in Ulthuan.[50]
  • Warhammer Fantasy Battles – a game of mass fantasy battles
  • Warhammer Quest – a game of dungeon exploration and questing, effectively an updated version of Advanced HeroQuest
  • Warhammer Quest: Silver Tower (released 2016) – dungeon crawl game in the Warhammer Age of Sigmar universe. Despite sharing the Warhammer Quest brand, rules and settings are completely different from the original game.

Warhammer 40,000 universe edit

  • Adeptus Titanicus (The original game in the Epic series, which dealt solely with combat between Titans.)
    • Codex Titanicus (Expanded rules for the above, adding rules for Ork and Eldar titans along with expanded rules for Eldar, Orks, Imperial Guard infantry and vehicles.)
  • Advanced Space Crusade
  • Assassinorum: Execution Force
  • Bommerz over da Sulphur River (Board game using Epic miniatures.)
  • Blackstone Fortress - a dungeon crawl game set in the Warhammer 40,000 universe.
  • Epic 40,000 (The precursor to Epic Armageddon, although some people still use the terms interchangeably, alongside Epic.)
  • Gorkamorka (A vehicle skirmish game set on a desert world, revolving principally around rival Ork factions.)
    • Digganob (An expansion for Gorkamorka, adding rebel gretchin and feral human factions.)
  • Lost Patrol
  • Shadow War: Armageddon - an updated version of the Necromunda skirmish ruleset, using the current Warhammer 40,000 factions in place of Necromunda's human gangs (released 2017).
  • Space Fleet (A simple spaceship combat game, later greatly expanded via White Dwarf magazine with material intended for the aborted 'Battleship Gothic', itself later relaunched as Battlefleet Gothic.)
  • Space Hulk (Four editions were published; expansions are listed below.)
    • Deathwing (An expansion boxed set adding new Terminator weapons and a new campaign.)
    • Genestealer (An expansion boxed set adding rules for Genestealer hybrids and psychic powers.)
    • Space Hulk Campaigns (An expansion book released in both soft and hard-cover collecting reprinted four campaigns previously printed in White Dwarf.)
  • Space Marine (The original Epic-scale game concerning troops and infantry, 1st edition was compatible with Adeptus Titanicus, 2nd with Titan Legions)
  • Titan Legions (An update of Adeptus Titanicus, effectively an expansion of Space Marine 2nd edition.)
  • Tyranid Attack (An introductory game reusing the boards from Advanced Space Crusade.)
  • Ultra Marines (An introductory game reusing the boards from Space Hulk.)

Specialist Games edit

These games are aimed at the "veteran" gamers. These are gamers who are more experienced in the core games produced by Games Workshop. This is because the rules and the complexity of tactics inherent in the systems are often more in-depth than the core games. This also includes games that aren't necessarily more complex, but have a smaller more specialised target audience.

  • Warhammer Fantasy universe
    • Dreadfleet – a naval combat style board game (limited stock) released on 1 October 2011
    • Mighty Empires – a hexagonal tile based campaign supplement
    • Mordheim – a skirmish game. An expansion called Empire in Flames was also released
    • Warmaster – a game for fighting larger battles with smaller (10 mm) miniatures
  • Warhammer 40,000 universe
    • Battlefleet Gothic – a game which depicts battles between fleets of space ships.
    • Epic – a game for fighting larger battles with smaller (6 mm) miniatures (known as Epic Armageddon in its current edition).
    • Inquisitor – a skirmish/role play game using larger (54 mm) more detailed miniatures and intended for older gamers.
    • Space Hulk – a two-player game of Space Marines versus Tyranids released in 1989.
  • The Lord of the Rings universe
    • Great Battles of Middle Earth: The Battle of Five Armies – a game for fighting larger battles with smaller (10 mm) miniatures. The game was named after (and initially centred on) the Battle of Five Armies, one of the later scenes in J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit.
    • The Strategy Battle Game was expanded with new supplements. In 2009 an expansion for the game entitled 'War of the Ring' was released, allowing players to recreate large scale battles in Middle-Earth. In December 2012 Games Workshop released the first wave of models based on the movie The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey.[51]

Forge World edit

Licensed games edit

These games were not made by Games Workshop but used similar-style models, artwork and concepts. These games were made by mainstream toy companies and were available in toy and department stores.

  • Battle Masters (published by Milton Bradley)
  • HeroQuest (published by Milton Bradley)
    • Kellar's Keep (Expansion for Hero Quest)
    • Return of the Witch Lord (Expansion for Hero Quest)
    • Against the Ogre Horde (Expansion for Hero Quest)
    • Wizards of Morcar (Expansion for Hero Quest)
    • The Frozen Horror (Expansion for Hero Quest)
    • The Magic of the Mirror (Expansion for Hero Quest)
    • The Dark Company (Expansion for Hero Quest)
    • HeroQuest Adventure Design Kit (Expansion for Hero Quest)
    • Adventure Design Booklet (Expansion for Hero Quest)
  • Space Crusade (published by Milton Bradley)
    • Mission Dreadnought (Expansion for Space Crusade)
    • Eldar Attack (Expansion for Space Crusade)

Citadel Paints edit

Games Workshop produces a line of acrylic paints for painting miniatures, under the Citadel name. At the end of March 2012 the company announced a new range of over 145 colours made in the UK,[52] which has since been expanded and reorganised. These paints are broken down into different types, each with a different intended purpose. This allows painters to follow painting guides produced by Games Workshop and create custom paint schemes more easily as each step in Games Workshop's 'Eavy Metal painting style has a paint type designed to assist in application. The 'Eavy Metal style is named after the 'Eavy Metal Team, Games Workshop's studio painting team, and is characterised by simple highlights and shadows with strong edge-highlights on all edges, creating a look that is clean, easily and quickly reproducible across many models, and defines details well on a game table.

The current Citadel paint types are:[53]

  • Base: Pigment dense for high opacity. Intended to offer good coverage over a primer layer for a strong foundation of colour.
  • Layer: Thinner and less pigment dense than Base paints for slight translucency. Intended to be built up over multiple layers to create smooth transitions of colour or value.
  • Shade: Acrylic ink based "paints" that are thin and flow easily into recessed details. Intended to be applied as a wash to add depth and shadow.
  • Dry: Thick, paste-consistency paints with maximum pigment concentration. Intended to aid in drybrushing to achieve easy highlighting of models.
  • Air: A selection of colours from the Base and Layer lines that are thinned down, as well as some "Clear" paints. Intended to be used through an airbrush.
  • Technical: A range of non-standard "paints" to achieve additional effects. These include gloss paints for slime or wet blood, semi-transparent glossy paints for gemstone effects, weathering effect paints, spectral effect paints, textured pastes for gaming bases, acrylic mediums, and acrylic varnishes. Intended for adding finishing details to models.
  • Spray: Spray-can paints that come in black, white, and a small selection of colours from the Base line. Intended as a primer layer and to add a foundation coat of colour quickly.
  • Contrast: Thinned paint and medium mixtures that flow into recesses similar to Shade paints, but also stain the raised details creating a blended fade from highlight to shadow. Intended to be applied over specialised Spray paints to give an effect similar to using a Base, then Layer, then Shade, but in one coat of paint to speed up the painting process.

The line includes both metallic and non-metallic paints in the Base, Layer, Edge, Dry, and Air lines, with non-metallic paints having a matte/light-satin finish.

Contrast paints were added to the Games Workshop paint range in 2019, promoted as speeding up the painting process for players. The existing range of paints was also expanded and reorganised when Contrast was released,[54] and branding changed from Citadel to Citadel Colour. The previously available Glaze line of paints was discontinued, replaced with the introduction of the Air Clear paints, the previously available Edge line of paints were combined into the Layer line, with some colours also being renamed, and the previously separate Texture line of paints was combined into the Technical line.[55]

The Citadel line also includes various other hobby supplies, including basing materials such as static grass and tufts, as well as modelling tools, such as paint brushes, glues, and hobby clippers.

Role-playing games edit

Several of the miniatures games (e.g. Inquisitor) involve a role-playing element; however, Games Workshop has, in the past, published role-playing games set within the Warhammer universe. Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay was first published in 1986; a second edition appeared in 2005 published by Black Industries, part of GW's fiction imprint BL Publishing. In 2018 a 4th edition was published by Cubicle 7 who will also re-publish the iconic Enemy Within campaign in 2020, adapted for the new edition by the original writers.

Warhammer 40,000: Dark Heresy, the first of three proposed role-playing games set in the Warhammer 40,000 universe, was released in late January 2008 and sold out almost immediately. In September 2008 production was transferred to Fantasy Flight Games.[56]

Fantasy Flight Games subsequently published four other roleplaying games; Rogue Trader, Deathwatch, Black Crusade, and Only War, set in the same Warhammer 40,000 universe and employing similar mechanics. In 2009 Fantasy Flight also released a new edition of Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay.

Out of print edit

Out of print, republished edit

The following games are technically out of print in their original editions, but have had new versions (in some cases heavily revised and in some cases with additional game expansions) published by Fantasy Flight Games.

Boxed games edit

Games Workshop had a strong history in boardgames development, alongside the miniatures and RPGs. Several may have had roleplaying elements, or had miniatures included or produced. Spacefarers released in 1981 was one of these board games with a set of miniature rules especially designed for use with Citadel Miniatures' figures.[60]: 139 

Licensing for an undisclosed proportion of Games Workshop's back catalogue of board games was transferred to Fantasy Flight Games as part of the same transaction which included Black Library's Role Playing Games. Fantasy Flight has republished revised editions of a number of these games. At the time of the announcement, Black Library had only one boardgame in print, the 4th Edition of "Talisman". Fantasy Flight subsequently released revised editions of Talisman and of other former Games Workshop boardgames. On September 9, 2016, Fantasy Flight Games announced the termination of its licensing agreement with Games Workshop.[61]

Games Workshop currently has several standalone board games in production.[62] Being standalone games, they do not depend on the rules or components of the current core game systems of Warhammer Age of Sigmar or Warhammer 40,000. All of these include miniatures that require some assembly, and those miniatures can be used with the core game systems.

  • Assassinorum: Execution Force
  • Blood Bowl
  • Deathwatch: Overkill
  • Gorechosen
  • Lost Patrol
  • Stormcloud Attack
  • The Horus Heresy: Betrayal at Calth
  • The Horus Heresy: Burning of Prospero
  • Warhammer 40,000: Kill Team
  • Warhammer Quest: Silver Tower

Out of print edit

Out of print, republished edit

The following games are technically out of print in their original editions, but have had new versions (in all cases heavily revised and in some cases with additional game expansions) published by Fantasy Flight Games.

Video games edit

Games Workshop licensed or produced several ZX Spectrum games in the early years, none of which were based in the usual Warhammer settings:

  • Apocalypse (1983) based on the original boardgame
  • Argent Warrior (1984) Illustrated adventure
  • Battlecars (1984) 2 player racing game written in BASIC
  • Chaos (1985) multiplayer turn based "board" game, written by Julian Gollop
  • D-Day (1985) based on the Normandy Landings
  • HeroQuest (1991) based on the MB board game
  • Journey's End (1985) text adventure
  • Key Of Hope, The (1985) text adventure
  • Ringworld (1984) text adventure
  • Runestone (1986) text adventure
  • Talisman (1985) multiplayer turn based "board" game
  • Tower Of Despair (1985) text adventure, also released for the Commodore 64.[63]

Many video games have been produced by third parties based on the Warhammer universes owned by the firm. These include (miniature game they are based on is included in parentheses after the game name):

Tactical Card Games (TCGs) edit

Games Workshop released a Trading Card Game in 2017 based on the Age of Sigmar universe, Age of Sigmar: Champions. Champions featured several unique features, such as a companion online version of the game with collections being synced across both paper and digital versions. Compared to other, more traditional TCGs (Such as Magic: The Gathering) Champions also included a rotation system as a resource management and lanes for play - similar to MOBA style games such as League of Legends.

Events edit

There were yearly Games Day events held by Games Workshop which included the Golden Demon painting competition, news stands, sales stands, and tables to play on. In 2014 it was replaced by 'Warhammer Fest', similar but with additions such as demonstration pods and seminars.[64]

Worldwide campaigns edit

Games Workshop has run numerous Worldwide Campaigns for its three core game systems. In each campaign, players are invited to submit the results of games played within a certain time period.[65] The collation of these results provides a result to the campaign's scenario, and sometime leads to modifications in the games.

Each Warhammer campaign has had a new codex published with the rules for special characters or "incomplete" army lists. Below are listed the Games Workshop Worldwide Campaigns (with the campaign's fictional universe setting in parentheses):

  • 1995 - The Battle of Ichar IV (Warhammer 40,000)
  • 2000 - Third War for Armageddon (Warhammer 40,000)[66]
  • 2001 - Dark Shadows (Warhammer)
  • 2003 - Eye of Terror (Warhammer 40,000)[67]
  • 2004 - Storm of Chaos (Warhammer)[68]
  • 2005 - The War of the Ring (The Lord of the Rings Strategy Battle Game)[69][70]
  • 2006 - The Fall of Medusa V (Warhammer 40,000)[71]
  • 2007 - The Nemesis Crown (Warhammer)[72]
  • 2011 - Scourge of the Storm (Warhammer)[73]

These Campaigns were run to promote its miniature wargames, and attracted interest in the hobby, particularly at gaming clubs, Hobby Centres and independent stockists.[65] Forums for the community were created for each campaign (in addition to those on the main site), as a place to "swap tactics, plan where to post your results, or just chat about how the campaign is going."[65] In some cases special miniatures were released to coincide with the campaigns; the promotional "Gimli on Dead Uruk-hai" miniature, for example, was available only through the campaign roadshows or ordering online.[74] As a whole these events have been successful; one, for example, was deemed "a fantastic rollercoaster", with thousands of registered participants.[75]

Magazines edit

Games Workshop's has published the White Dwarf magazine since 1977 and has over 400 issues.[5] Games Workshop also published Fanatic Magazine in support of their Specialist Games range.[76] After the cancellation of Fanatic Magazine, an electronic version, known as "Fanatic Online" was published from Games Workshop's Specialist Games website.[77]

For a brief period in the mid-1980s GW took over publication of the Fighting Fantasy magazine Warlock from Puffin Books who had produced the first 5 issues. The magazine turned into a general introductory gaming magazine but was discontinued after issue 13.[78]

There was also a fortnightly series called "Battle Games in Middle Earth", which came with a single or several free Lord of the Rings SBG miniatures. Though the miniatures were made by Games Workshop, the magazine itself was written by SGS (part of Games Workshop) and published by De Agostini.[79]

Spots the Space Marine trademark complaint edit

Games Workshop issued a trademark complaint against retailer Amazon, specifically relating to the novel Spots the Space Marine, claiming it violated their European 'space marine' trademark.[80][81] Commentators such as Cory Doctorow[82] and digital rights group the Electronic Frontier Foundation,[83] questioned the right of Games Workshop to trademark the term.[84] On 8 February 2013, Spots the Space Marine reappeared on Amazon. Games Workshop has issued no further legal action.[85]

Other media edit

Games Workshop illustrators also published artbooks covering parts of their commissioned work for the company. These include Adrian Smith, Ian Miller and John Blanche.[86]

Short fiction edit

From 1997 to 2005 Black Library published INFERNO!, a magazine of short stories, artwork, and other features set in the various fictional universes of Games Workshop, and regularly featuring that of Warhammer 40,000.[87] Since 2010 Black Library has produced a monthly eBook called "Hammer and Bolter" with the focus on short stories set in the different Games Workshop universes.[88]

Novels edit

Comics and graphic novels edit

Music edit

In November 1987 the English thrash metal band Sabbat released "Blood for the Blood God" as a free flexi-disc with the issue #95 of White Dwarf, Games Workshop's in-house publication.[89]

In the late 1980s the death metal band Bolt Thrower wrote lyrics dedicated to the Warhammer 40,000 universe and used 40k artwork on the cover of their second album, Realm of Chaos.[90]

In the early 1990s Games Workshop created its own short-lived record company, Warhammer Records. The only band under this label was D-Rok (who published one album, Oblivion, in 1991). A fragment of D-Rok's song "Get Out of My Way" was used in the computer game "Space Hulk", published by Electronic Arts in 1992.[91]

In the early 2000s the German label Art of Perception produced a 12 part soundtrack vinyl series followed by three CD compilations. The task for the artists involved in this project was to conduct a theme for a species from the Warhammer 40.000 universe.[92]

In 2009 the Singaporean death metal band, Deus Ex Machina released I, Human, which makes numerous references to the Warhammer 40,000 universe, particularly the Adeptus Mechanicus faction.[93]

In 2007 and 2015 the German death metal band Debauchery released several songs about the Chaos God Khorne, "Praise the Blood God", "True To The Skull Throne (And Bound To Kill)", and "Blood For The Blood God".[94]

Film edit

Games Workshop announced that Exile Studios would produce a CGI movie based upon the Bloodquest graphic novel; a trailer was released, but the project was discontinued and Exile Studios disbanded.[95]

For the 25th Anniversary Games Day, Games Workshop released in 1996 (for limited sale) a short movie entitled Inquisitor,[96] using clips and footage that was created as a pitch to G.W. for a film deal. There were also trailers for two other films, "Hive Infestation" and "Blood for the Blood God". "Hive Infestation" pitted Space Wolf terminators against a genestealer cult infestation of a hive world. "Blood for the Blood God" was the second trailer released, and portrayed orks and Dark Angel marines fighting along with an inquisitor, much in the style of the Epic 40,000 video game cut scenes, but little information was given on this short film aside from a shot of a berserker of Khorne (available in YouTube but flagged by Games Workshop, removing the movie).[97]

Another one was Damnatus, a German fan film developed over four years. Games Workshop announced in July 2007 that they would not give permission for the film to be released because of issues between Anglo-American copyright and Continental European Droit d'auteur.[96]

In 2010 Games Workshop with Codex Pictures released a 70-minute downloadable film called Ultramarines. The screenplay was written by Black Library author Dan Abnett. Terence Stamp, Sean Pertwee and John Hurt head the cast of voice actors.[98]

On 5 August 2021, Games Workshop launched Warhammer Plus, a subscription service that provides access to exclusive Warhammer-themed shows and animations, as well as other content such as classic issues of the White Dwarf magazine and exclusive miniatures.[99][100]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Annual Results 2022" (PDF). Games Workshop. Retrieved 16 February 2023.
  2. ^ Livingstone, Ian (April 1975). "Editorial". Owl and Weasel. Games Workshop (3): 2.
  3. ^ "Four things we should thank Games Workshop for". Nerdist. 20 January 2016. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
  4. ^ "Ian Livingstone and Steve Jackson interview". GamesRadar+. 24 August 2007. Retrieved 18 January 2016.
  5. ^ a b Livingstone, Ian (April 1977). "White Dwarf". Owl and Weasel. Games Workshop (25): 6.
  6. ^ Jackson, Steve (February 1975). "Editorial". Owl and Weasel. Games Workshop (1): 1.
  7. ^ Livingstone, Ian (January 1976). "Editorial". Owl and Weasel. Games Workshop (12): 2.
  8. ^ Dice Men: Games Workshop 1975 to 1985: Ian Livingstone and Steve Jackson with Jamie Thomson. Unbound. 11 January 2017. ISBN 9781407181301. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
  9. ^ "A new dungeon for Games Workshop". White Dwarf. Games Workshop (7): 23. June–July 1978.
  10. ^ "Google Maps". Google Maps. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
  11. ^ "OpenStreetMap". OpenStreetMap. Retrieved 18 September 2020.
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External links edit

  • Official website  

games, workshop, unrelated, defunct, american, company, game, designers, workshop, group, often, abbreviated, british, manufacturer, miniature, wargames, based, nottingham, england, best, known, products, warhammer, warhammer, group, headquarters, nottinghamty. For the unrelated defunct American company see Game Designers Workshop Games Workshop Group often abbreviated as GW is a British manufacturer of miniature wargames based in Nottingham England Its best known products are Warhammer and Warhammer 40 000 Games Workshop Group plcGames Workshop headquarters in NottinghamTypePublic limited companyTraded asLSE GAWFTSE 250 componentIndustryMiniature wargamingFounded1975 48 years ago 1975 in London EnglandFounderJohn PeakeIan LivingstoneSteve JacksonHeadquartersNottingham EnglandKey peopleNick Donaldson Non Executive Chairman Kevin Rountree CEO ProductsWarhammer Age of SigmarWarhammer 40 000The Lord of the Rings SBGRevenue 386 8 million 2022 1 Operating income 157 1 million 2022 1 Net income 128 4 million 2022 1 SubsidiariesGames Workshop LimitedCitadel MiniaturesBlack LibraryWebsitewww wbr warhammer wbr comFounded in 1975 by John Peake Ian Livingstone and Steve Jackson Games Workshop was originally a manufacturer of wooden boards for games including backgammon mancala nine men s morris and Go It later became an importer of the U S role playing game Dungeons amp Dragons and then a publisher of wargames and role playing games in its own right expanding from a bedroom mail order company in the process It expanded into Europe the US Canada and Australia in the early 1990s All UK based operations were relocated to the current headquarters in Lenton Nottingham in 1997 It started promoting games associated with The Lord of the Rings film trilogy in 2001 It also owns Forge World which makes complementary specialist resin miniatures and conversion kits It is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 250 Index Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 Refocus 2 Operations 2 1 Licensing 2 2 Group divisions 3 Miniature games 3 1 Current core games 3 2 Other games 3 3 Out of print 3 3 1 Warhammer Age of Sigmar universe 3 3 2 Warhammer Fantasy universe 3 3 3 Warhammer 40 000 universe 3 3 4 Specialist Games 3 3 5 Forge World 3 3 6 Licensed games 4 Citadel Paints 5 Role playing games 5 1 Out of print 5 2 Out of print republished 6 Boxed games 6 1 Out of print 6 2 Out of print republished 7 Video games 8 Tactical Card Games TCGs 9 Events 10 Worldwide campaigns 11 Magazines 12 Spots the Space Marine trademark complaint 13 Other media 13 1 Short fiction 13 2 Novels 13 3 Comics and graphic novels 13 4 Music 13 5 Film 14 References 15 External linksHistory editEarly years edit Founded in 1975 at 15 Bolingbroke Road London by John Peake Ian Livingstone and Steve Jackson not to be confused with U S game designer Steve Jackson Games Workshop was originally a manufacturer of wooden boards for games including backgammon mancala nine men s morris and Go 2 It later became an importer of the U S role playing game Dungeons amp Dragons and then a publisher of wargames and role playing games in its own right expanding from a bedroom mail order company in the process 3 nbsp Cover of White Dwarf Issue 1 June July 1977In order to promote their business and postal games create a games club and provide an alternative source for games news the newsletter Owl and Weasel 4 was founded in February 1975 This was superseded in June 1977 by White Dwarf 5 From the outset there was a clear stated interest in print regarding progressive games including computer gaming 6 which led to the departure of John Peake in early 1976 who preferred traditional games such as backgammon The loss of Peake also meant the loss of the fledgling company s main source of income 7 However having successfully obtained official distribution rights to Dungeons amp Dragons and other TSR products in the UK and maintaining a high profile by running games conventions the business grew rapidly It opened its first shop in April 1978 8 nbsp Games Workshop opening day at 1 Dalling Road Hammersmith London in April 1978 9 10 11 In late 1978 Games Workshop provided the funding to co found Citadel Miniatures in Newark on Trent Citadel would produce the metal miniatures used in its role playing games and tabletop wargames The Citadel name became synonymous with Games Workshop Miniatures and continues to be a trademarked brand name used in association with them long after the Citadel company was absorbed into Games Workshop 12 13 For a time Gary Gygax promoted the idea of TSR Inc merging with Games Workshop until Steve Jackson and Ian Livingstone backed out 14 The company s publishing arm also released UK reprints of American RPGs such as Call of Cthulhu Runequest Traveller and Middle earth Role Playing which were expensive to import having previously done so for Dungeons amp Dragons since 1977 15 In 1984 Games Workshop ceased distributing its products in the U S through hobby games distributors and opened its Games Workshop U S office Games Workshop U S and Games Workshop in general grew significantly in the late 1980s with over 250 employees on the payroll by 1990 16 Refocus edit Tom Kirby became General Manager in 1986 17 Following a management buyout by him and Bryan Ansell in December 1991 when Livingstone and Jackson sold their shares for 10 million 18 Games Workshop refocused on their miniature wargames Warhammer Fantasy Battle WFB and Warhammer 40 000 WH40k their most lucrative lines The retail chain refocused on a younger more family oriented market The change of direction was a great success and the company enjoyed growing profits but the more commercial direction of the company made it lose some of its old fan base A breakaway group of two company employees published Fantasy Warlord in competition with Games Workshop but the new company met with little success and closed in 1993 Games Workshop expanded in Europe the US Canada and Australia opening new branches and organising events in each new commercial territory Having been acquired by private equity firm ECI Partners the company was floated on the London Stock Exchange in October 1994 19 20 In October 1997 all UK based operations were relocated to the current headquarters in Lenton Nottingham 21 The company diversified by acquiring Sabretooth Games card games creating the Black Library literature and working with THQ computer games 22 nbsp A Games Workshop store in Dusseldorf Germany pictured in 2009In late 2009 Games Workshop issued a succession of cease and desist orders against various Internet sites it accused of violating its intellectual property generating anger and disappointment from its fan community 23 24 On 16 May 2011 Maelstrom Games announced that Games Workshop had revised the terms and conditions of their trade agreement with independent stockists in the UK The new terms and conditions restricted the sale of all Games Workshop products to within the European Economic Area 25 On 16 June 2013 WarGameStore a UK based retailer of Games Workshop products since 2003 announced further changes to Games Workshop s trade agreement with UK based independent stockists 26 Tom Kirby stepped down in 2017 27 In July 2021 Games Workshop made changes to their IP guidelines adopting a zero tolerance stance towards fan made games videos and animations drawing criticism from fans 28 29 30 The presence of Games Workshop in the East Midlands has led the region to become the centre of the wargames industry in the UK known as the lead belt with numerous other companies founded by former employees 31 Operations editLicensing edit Alongside the UK publishing rights to several American role playing games in the 1980s including Call of Cthulhu Runequest 32 and Middle earth Role Playing 33 Games Workshop also secured the rights to produce miniatures or games for several classic British science fiction properties such as Doctor Who 34 35 and several characters from 2000 AD including Rogue Trooper and Judge Dredd 36 Alongside the rights to reprint Iron Crown Enterprises Middle earth Role Playing Citadel Miniatures acquired the rights to produce 28 mm miniatures based on The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit 37 In conjunction with the promotion of The Lord of the Rings film trilogy in 2001 Games Workshop acquired the rights to produce a skirmish wargame and miniatures using the movies production and publicity art and information provided by the original novels by J R R Tolkien A 25 mm scale was used 38 The rights to produce a role playing game using the films art and both the book and the movies plots and characters were sold to another firm Decipher Inc Games Workshop also produced a Battle of Five Armies game based on a culminating episode in The Hobbit using 10 mm scale 39 On 10 February 2011 Warner Bros Consumer Products announced that it had extended its six year agreement with Games Workshop continuing its exclusive worldwide rights to produce tabletop games based on The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings Games Workshop announced plans to expand their offerings of battle games and model soldiers and to continue to develop and increase offerings based on J R R Tolkien s fantasy books 40 Group divisions edit Games Workshop has expanded into several divisions companies producing products related to the Warhammer universe Forge World makes specialist resin miniatures and conversion kits for Games Workshop s titles as well as its Specialist Games range Forge World was also responsible for the Warhammer Historical line of historical wargames rules including Warhammer Ancient Battles all of which were previously published by as a component of Black Library 41 In August 2018 Forge World announced substantial changes to its U S pricing model in exchange for faster and less costly shipping services to the United States 42 As of 31st November 2023 the Forge World website was made defunct as part of the company merger under the banner name Warhammer in one website the resin kits sold were also marked as Advance model kits with an age rating attached 43 BL Publishing was the fiction board game and roleplaying game publishing arm of Games Workshop They comprised several separate imprints Black Library Black Flame and Solaris Books Warp Artefacts used to produce merchandise based on Games Workshop s intellectual property they are now folded into BLP as BL Merchandise 44 The company has hard to reproduce unique intellectual property and a good export record Sales slowed around 1999 2000 due to supply chain issues but quickly rebounded a few years later 45 Miniature games editGames Workshop previously produced miniature figures via an associated originally independent company called Citadel Miniatures while the main company concentrated on retail The distinction between the two blurred after Games Workshop stores ceased to sell retail products by other manufacturers and Citadel was effectively merged back into Games Workshop 46 Current core games edit The following games were in production as of 2023 update Warhammer Age of Sigmar 3rd Edition 2021 Warhammer 40 000 10th Edition 2023 Middle Earth Strategy Battle Game 2018 Warhammer The Horus Heresy 2022 47 Other games edit The following games were in production as of 2021 update 48 Adeptus Titanicus A new version of the original game released 2019 Aeronautica Imperialis Aerial combat game updated from the Forge World version released 2019 Blood Bowl an American football style game using fantasy creatures Originally released in 1986 it was revived in 2016 with a Second Season Edition in 2020 Legiones Imperialis a war game set during the Horus Heresy in the Warhammer 40 000 universe Legiones Imperialis is a revitalized version of Epic 40 000 Necromunda a skirmish game set on a hive world which pits gangs of humans against each other using modified 2nd edition Warhammer 40 000 rules which are more detailed than newer editions and more suitable for skirmish games Originally printed in 1995 it was revived at the end of 2017 Warcry A skirmish game set in the Age of Sigmar universe new edition released 2022 Warhammer 40 000 Kill Team A skirmish version of Warhammer 40 000 using the same factions and units new edition released 2021 Warhammer Underworlds A game set in the Age of Sigmar setting combining miniature gaming and deck building released 2017 Out of print edit Warhammer Age of Sigmar universe edit Warhammer Quest Shadows over Hammerhal released 2017 49 dungeon crawl game in the Warhammer Age of Sigmar universe Despite sharing the Warhammer Quest brand rules and setting are completely different from the original game Warhammer Fantasy universe edit Advanced HeroQuest Kerrunch a simplified version of Blood Bowl Man O War a game of naval combat in a fantasy world Two expansions were also released Sea of Blood and Plague Fleet Mighty Warriors a simplified version of Advanced HeroQuest More of a light Skirmish game using AHQ minis set in a dungeon Dragon Masters a board game which played like a simplified version of Mighty Empires in which players take the role of competing Elven princes in Ulthuan 50 Warhammer Fantasy Battles a game of mass fantasy battles Terror of the Lichemaster a set of three linked scenarios using Warhammer Fantasy Battle setting and rules Warhammer Quest a game of dungeon exploration and questing effectively an updated version of Advanced HeroQuest Warhammer Quest Silver Tower released 2016 dungeon crawl game in the Warhammer Age of Sigmar universe Despite sharing the Warhammer Quest brand rules and settings are completely different from the original game Warhammer 40 000 universe edit Adeptus Titanicus The original game in the Epic series which dealt solely with combat between Titans Codex Titanicus Expanded rules for the above adding rules for Ork and Eldar titans along with expanded rules for Eldar Orks Imperial Guard infantry and vehicles Advanced Space Crusade Assassinorum Execution Force Bommerz over da Sulphur River Board game using Epic miniatures Blackstone Fortress a dungeon crawl game set in the Warhammer 40 000 universe Epic 40 000 The precursor to Epic Armageddon although some people still use the terms interchangeably alongside Epic Gorkamorka A vehicle skirmish game set on a desert world revolving principally around rival Ork factions Digganob An expansion for Gorkamorka adding rebel gretchin and feral human factions Lost Patrol Shadow War Armageddon an updated version of the Necromunda skirmish ruleset using the current Warhammer 40 000 factions in place of Necromunda s human gangs released 2017 Space Fleet A simple spaceship combat game later greatly expanded via White Dwarf magazine with material intended for the aborted Battleship Gothic itself later relaunched as Battlefleet Gothic Space Hulk Four editions were published expansions are listed below Deathwing An expansion boxed set adding new Terminator weapons and a new campaign Genestealer An expansion boxed set adding rules for Genestealer hybrids and psychic powers Space Hulk Campaigns An expansion book released in both soft and hard cover collecting reprinted four campaigns previously printed in White Dwarf Space Marine The original Epic scale game concerning troops and infantry 1st edition was compatible with Adeptus Titanicus 2nd with Titan Legions Titan Legions An update of Adeptus Titanicus effectively an expansion of Space Marine 2nd edition Tyranid Attack An introductory game reusing the boards from Advanced Space Crusade Ultra Marines An introductory game reusing the boards from Space Hulk Specialist Games edit These games are aimed at the veteran gamers These are gamers who are more experienced in the core games produced by Games Workshop This is because the rules and the complexity of tactics inherent in the systems are often more in depth than the core games This also includes games that aren t necessarily more complex but have a smaller more specialised target audience Warhammer Fantasy universe Dreadfleet a naval combat style board game limited stock released on 1 October 2011 Mighty Empires a hexagonal tile based campaign supplement Mordheim a skirmish game An expansion called Empire in Flames was also released Warmaster a game for fighting larger battles with smaller 10 mm miniatures Warhammer 40 000 universe Battlefleet Gothic a game which depicts battles between fleets of space ships Epic a game for fighting larger battles with smaller 6 mm miniatures known as Epic Armageddon in its current edition Inquisitor a skirmish role play game using larger 54 mm more detailed miniatures and intended for older gamers Space Hulk a two player game of Space Marines versus Tyranids released in 1989 The Lord of the Rings universe Great Battles of Middle Earth The Battle of Five Armies a game for fighting larger battles with smaller 10 mm miniatures The game was named after and initially centred on the Battle of Five Armies one of the later scenes in J R R Tolkien s The Hobbit The Strategy Battle Game was expanded with new supplements In 2009 an expansion for the game entitled War of the Ring was released allowing players to recreate large scale battles in Middle Earth In December 2012 Games Workshop released the first wave of models based on the movie The Hobbit An Unexpected Journey 51 Forge World edit Aeronautica Imperialis a game based around Epic scale aircraft combatLicensed games edit These games were not made by Games Workshop but used similar style models artwork and concepts These games were made by mainstream toy companies and were available in toy and department stores Battle Masters published by Milton Bradley HeroQuest published by Milton Bradley Kellar s Keep Expansion for Hero Quest Return of the Witch Lord Expansion for Hero Quest Against the Ogre Horde Expansion for Hero Quest Wizards of Morcar Expansion for Hero Quest The Frozen Horror Expansion for Hero Quest The Magic of the Mirror Expansion for Hero Quest The Dark Company Expansion for Hero Quest HeroQuest Adventure Design Kit Expansion for Hero Quest Adventure Design Booklet Expansion for Hero Quest Space Crusade published by Milton Bradley Mission Dreadnought Expansion for Space Crusade Eldar Attack Expansion for Space Crusade Citadel Paints editGames Workshop produces a line of acrylic paints for painting miniatures under the Citadel name At the end of March 2012 the company announced a new range of over 145 colours made in the UK 52 which has since been expanded and reorganised These paints are broken down into different types each with a different intended purpose This allows painters to follow painting guides produced by Games Workshop and create custom paint schemes more easily as each step in Games Workshop s Eavy Metal painting style has a paint type designed to assist in application The Eavy Metal style is named after the Eavy Metal Team Games Workshop s studio painting team and is characterised by simple highlights and shadows with strong edge highlights on all edges creating a look that is clean easily and quickly reproducible across many models and defines details well on a game table The current Citadel paint types are 53 Base Pigment dense for high opacity Intended to offer good coverage over a primer layer for a strong foundation of colour Layer Thinner and less pigment dense than Base paints for slight translucency Intended to be built up over multiple layers to create smooth transitions of colour or value Shade Acrylic ink based paints that are thin and flow easily into recessed details Intended to be applied as a wash to add depth and shadow Dry Thick paste consistency paints with maximum pigment concentration Intended to aid in drybrushing to achieve easy highlighting of models Air A selection of colours from the Base and Layer lines that are thinned down as well as some Clear paints Intended to be used through an airbrush Technical A range of non standard paints to achieve additional effects These include gloss paints for slime or wet blood semi transparent glossy paints for gemstone effects weathering effect paints spectral effect paints textured pastes for gaming bases acrylic mediums and acrylic varnishes Intended for adding finishing details to models Spray Spray can paints that come in black white and a small selection of colours from the Base line Intended as a primer layer and to add a foundation coat of colour quickly Contrast Thinned paint and medium mixtures that flow into recesses similar to Shade paints but also stain the raised details creating a blended fade from highlight to shadow Intended to be applied over specialised Spray paints to give an effect similar to using a Base then Layer then Shade but in one coat of paint to speed up the painting process The line includes both metallic and non metallic paints in the Base Layer Edge Dry and Air lines with non metallic paints having a matte light satin finish Contrast paints were added to the Games Workshop paint range in 2019 promoted as speeding up the painting process for players The existing range of paints was also expanded and reorganised when Contrast was released 54 and branding changed from Citadel to Citadel Colour The previously available Glaze line of paints was discontinued replaced with the introduction of the Air Clear paints the previously available Edge line of paints were combined into the Layer line with some colours also being renamed and the previously separate Texture line of paints was combined into the Technical line 55 The Citadel line also includes various other hobby supplies including basing materials such as static grass and tufts as well as modelling tools such as paint brushes glues and hobby clippers Role playing games editSeveral of the miniatures games e g Inquisitor involve a role playing element however Games Workshop has in the past published role playing games set within the Warhammer universe Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay was first published in 1986 a second edition appeared in 2005 published by Black Industries part of GW s fiction imprint BL Publishing In 2018 a 4th edition was published by Cubicle 7 who will also re publish the iconic Enemy Within campaign in 2020 adapted for the new edition by the original writers Warhammer 40 000 Dark Heresy the first of three proposed role playing games set in the Warhammer 40 000 universe was released in late January 2008 and sold out almost immediately In September 2008 production was transferred to Fantasy Flight Games 56 Fantasy Flight Games subsequently published four other roleplaying games Rogue Trader Deathwatch Black Crusade and Only War set in the same Warhammer 40 000 universe and employing similar mechanics In 2009 Fantasy Flight also released a new edition of Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay Out of print edit Golden Heroes a superhero roleplaying game published in 1984 after initially being published on an amateur basis Judge Dredd The Role Playing Game published under licence in 1985 Stormbringer the third edition of the game published under license from Chaosium in 1987 RuneQuest GW published the second edition under license from Chaosium and the third edition under license from Avalon Hill in the UK 57 221 Call of Cthulhu GW published the second and third edition rules in the UK along with their own adventures and supplements Traveller GW published Classic Traveller rules supplements and adventures under licence from Game Designers Workshop from 1979 They published their own supplement character and starship sheets in 1981 58 122 59 334 337 339 In Search of New Gods a roleplaying game adventure published in 1986Out of print republished edit The following games are technically out of print in their original editions but have had new versions in some cases heavily revised and in some cases with additional game expansions published by Fantasy Flight Games Dark Heresy an RPG based in the WH40k Universe where players control one member of an Inquisitor s retinue Warhammer Fantasy RoleplayBoxed games editGames Workshop had a strong history in boardgames development alongside the miniatures and RPGs Several may have had roleplaying elements or had miniatures included or produced Spacefarers released in 1981 was one of these board games with a set of miniature rules especially designed for use with Citadel Miniatures figures 60 139 Licensing for an undisclosed proportion of Games Workshop s back catalogue of board games was transferred to Fantasy Flight Games as part of the same transaction which included Black Library s Role Playing Games Fantasy Flight has republished revised editions of a number of these games At the time of the announcement Black Library had only one boardgame in print the 4th Edition of Talisman Fantasy Flight subsequently released revised editions of Talisman and of other former Games Workshop boardgames On September 9 2016 Fantasy Flight Games announced the termination of its licensing agreement with Games Workshop 61 Games Workshop currently has several standalone board games in production 62 Being standalone games they do not depend on the rules or components of the current core game systems of Warhammer Age of Sigmar or Warhammer 40 000 All of these include miniatures that require some assembly and those miniatures can be used with the core game systems Assassinorum Execution Force Blood Bowl Deathwatch Overkill Gorechosen Lost Patrol Stormcloud Attack The Horus Heresy Betrayal at Calth The Horus Heresy Burning of Prospero Warhammer 40 000 Kill Team Warhammer Quest Silver TowerOut of print edit Apocalypse not to be confused with the expansion Warhammer 40 000 Apocalypse Battlecars Battle for Armageddon Chaos Attack Expansion for Battle for Armageddon Block Mania 2000AD Judge Dredd setting Mega Mania Expansion for Block Mania Blood Royale multiplayer battle and resource game of medieval Europe Calamity Chainsaw Warrior solo play game Cosmic Encounter under licence Curse of the Mummy s Tomb Dark Future similar to Car Wars Doctor Who The Game of Time amp Space 1980 Doom of the Eldar Gobbo s Banquet HeroQuest a fantasy board game published in 1989 in collaboration with Milton Bradley Hungry Troll and the Gobbos Judge Dredd see 2000 AD character Judge Dredd for background Kings and Things under licence Oi Dat s My Leg Quirks under licence Railway Rivals under licence Rogue Trooper see 2000 AD character Rogue Trooper for background Squelch Space Hulk Super Power Trolls in the Pantry Valley of the Four Winds Warlock The Warlock of Firetop Mountain based on the Fighting Fantasy game book Out of print republished edit The following games are technically out of print in their original editions but have had new versions in all cases heavily revised and in some cases with additional game expansions published by Fantasy Flight Games Chaos Marauders A boardgame of orcish mayhem Dungeonquest Fury of Dracula Horus Heresy Talisman Warrior KnightsVideo games editSee also List of Games Workshop video games Games Workshop licensed or produced several ZX Spectrum games in the early years none of which were based in the usual Warhammer settings Apocalypse 1983 based on the original boardgame Argent Warrior 1984 Illustrated adventure Battlecars 1984 2 player racing game written in BASIC Chaos 1985 multiplayer turn based board game written by Julian Gollop D Day 1985 based on the Normandy Landings HeroQuest 1991 based on the MB board game Journey s End 1985 text adventure Key Of Hope The 1985 text adventure Ringworld 1984 text adventure Runestone 1986 text adventure Talisman 1985 multiplayer turn based board game Tower Of Despair 1985 text adventure also released for the Commodore 64 63 Many video games have been produced by third parties based on the Warhammer universes owned by the firm These include miniature game they are based on is included in parentheses after the game name Space Crusade Space Crusade and 1 sequel for the Amiga Dark Omen RTT game based on Warhammer Fantasy Battles Shadow of the Horned Rat RTT game based on Warhammer Fantasy Battles Space Hulk Space Hulk Space Hulk Vengeance of the Blood Angels Space Hulk Final Liberation Epic 40 000 Space Marines Imperial Guard Orks Fire Warrior Warhammer 40 000 Tau Blood Bowl 1995 published by MicroLeague Dawn of War Warhammer 40 000 Space Marines Orks Eldar Chaos Space Marines Winter Assault Add on Armies same as Dawn of War also Imperial Guard Dark Crusade Stand Alone Same as Winter Assault also Necrons and Tau Soulstorm Stand Alone Same as Dark Crusade also Sisters of Battle and Dark Eldar Chaos Gate Warhammer 40 000 Space Marines Forces of Chaos Rites of War Warhammer 40 000 Eldar Space Marines Tyranid Mark of Chaos Warhammer The Empire High Elves Hordes of Chaos Skaven Orcs and Goblins Dwarves Battle March Add on Armies same as Mark of Chaos also Dark Elves Squad Command a turn based strategy game which focuses on a squad of Ultramarines fighting Chaos Space Marines Warhammer Online Age of Reckoning a Warhammer MMORPG by Mythic Entertainment Dawn of War II a sequel to Dawn of War focusing less on base building and more on squad tactics Warhammer 40 000 Space Marines Orks Eldar Tyranids Chaos Rising Stand Alone Armies same as Dawn of War II also Chaos Space Marines Retribution Stand Alone Same as Chaos Rising also Imperial Guard Blood Bowl 2009 Blood Bowl 2 Blood Bowl Space Marine an Action RPG game featuring the Ultramarines Space Marines Warhammer Online Wrath of Heroes a Warhammer MOBA game developed by BioWare Mythic cancelled Warhammer 40 000 Eternal Crusade a massively multiplayer online third person shooter game developed by Behaviour Interactive Warhammer End Times Vermintide a co op focused first person shooter action video game developed by Fatshark Set in the End Times players can team up with three other players to fight against the Skaven a race of rodent like monstrous creatures in the city of Ubersreik Warhammer Vermintide 2 a first person action video game developed by Fatshark Set in the Warhammer Fantasy fictional universe players battle cooperatively against a Chaos army of nurgle called Rotbloods and the Skaven of Clan Fester This alliance is called the Pactsworn and they function as the main enemy in the game Total War Warhammer a Real time and Turn based Strategy game part of SEGA and Creative Assembly s Total War Series Warhammer Fantasy Empire Vampire Counts Dwarves Orcs and Chaos playable Total War Warhammer II is a turn based strategy and real time tactics video game developed by Creative Assembly and published by Sega It is part of the Total War series and the sequel to 2016 s Total War Warhammer Warhammer Fantasy High Elves Skaven Dark Elves Lizardmen playable in the core game All factions from the first game and the second are playable in a combined super map for free if one bought the first game and any of the DLC races and content bought from either game is added as well Total War Warhammer III capstone game in the trilogy Warhammer Fantasy Monogods of Chaos Cathay Ogre Kingdoms Daemons of Chaos Kislev playable in core game Owners of previous two games can play a combined map of all 3 games including all previously playable factions Space Hulk Deathwing a First Person Shooter game developed by Streum On Studio and published by Focus Home Interactive Warhammer 40 000 Dawn of War III 2017 a real time strategy video game with MOBA influences released by Relic Entertainment and Sega in partnership with Games Workshop Warhammer 40 000 Darktide 2022 a first person action adventure video game under development by Fatshark Tactical Card Games TCGs editGames Workshop released a Trading Card Game in 2017 based on the Age of Sigmar universe Age of Sigmar Champions Champions featured several unique features such as a companion online version of the game with collections being synced across both paper and digital versions Compared to other more traditional TCGs Such as Magic The Gathering Champions also included a rotation system as a resource management and lanes for play similar to MOBA style games such as League of Legends Events editThere were yearly Games Day events held by Games Workshop which included the Golden Demon painting competition news stands sales stands and tables to play on In 2014 it was replaced by Warhammer Fest similar but with additions such as demonstration pods and seminars 64 Worldwide campaigns editGames Workshop has run numerous Worldwide Campaigns for its three core game systems In each campaign players are invited to submit the results of games played within a certain time period 65 The collation of these results provides a result to the campaign s scenario and sometime leads to modifications in the games Each Warhammer campaign has had a new codex published with the rules for special characters or incomplete army lists Below are listed the Games Workshop Worldwide Campaigns with the campaign s fictional universe setting in parentheses 1995 The Battle of Ichar IV Warhammer 40 000 2000 Third War for Armageddon Warhammer 40 000 66 2001 Dark Shadows Warhammer 2003 Eye of Terror Warhammer 40 000 67 2004 Storm of Chaos Warhammer 68 2005 The War of the Ring The Lord of the Rings Strategy Battle Game 69 70 2006 The Fall of Medusa V Warhammer 40 000 71 2007 The Nemesis Crown Warhammer 72 2011 Scourge of the Storm Warhammer 73 These Campaigns were run to promote its miniature wargames and attracted interest in the hobby particularly at gaming clubs Hobby Centres and independent stockists 65 Forums for the community were created for each campaign in addition to those on the main site as a place to swap tactics plan where to post your results or just chat about how the campaign is going 65 In some cases special miniatures were released to coincide with the campaigns the promotional Gimli on Dead Uruk hai miniature for example was available only through the campaign roadshows or ordering online 74 As a whole these events have been successful one for example was deemed a fantastic rollercoaster with thousands of registered participants 75 Magazines editGames Workshop s has published the White Dwarf magazine since 1977 and has over 400 issues 5 Games Workshop also published Fanatic Magazine in support of their Specialist Games range 76 After the cancellation of Fanatic Magazine an electronic version known as Fanatic Online was published from Games Workshop s Specialist Games website 77 For a brief period in the mid 1980s GW took over publication of the Fighting Fantasy magazine Warlock from Puffin Books who had produced the first 5 issues The magazine turned into a general introductory gaming magazine but was discontinued after issue 13 78 There was also a fortnightly series called Battle Games in Middle Earth which came with a single or several free Lord of the Rings SBG miniatures Though the miniatures were made by Games Workshop the magazine itself was written by SGS part of Games Workshop and published by De Agostini 79 Spots the Space Marine trademark complaint editGames Workshop issued a trademark complaint against retailer Amazon specifically relating to the novel Spots the Space Marine claiming it violated their European space marine trademark 80 81 Commentators such as Cory Doctorow 82 and digital rights group the Electronic Frontier Foundation 83 questioned the right of Games Workshop to trademark the term 84 On 8 February 2013 Spots the Space Marine reappeared on Amazon Games Workshop has issued no further legal action 85 Other media editGames Workshop illustrators also published artbooks covering parts of their commissioned work for the company These include Adrian Smith Ian Miller and John Blanche 86 Short fiction edit From 1997 to 2005 Black Library published INFERNO a magazine of short stories artwork and other features set in the various fictional universes of Games Workshop and regularly featuring that of Warhammer 40 000 87 Since 2010 Black Library has produced a monthly eBook called Hammer and Bolter with the focus on short stories set in the different Games Workshop universes 88 Novels edit Main articles List of Warhammer Fantasy novels and List of Warhammer 40 000 novels Comics and graphic novels edit Main article Black Library Comics and graphic novels line Music edit In November 1987 the English thrash metal band Sabbat released Blood for the Blood God as a free flexi disc with the issue 95 of White Dwarf Games Workshop s in house publication 89 In the late 1980s the death metal band Bolt Thrower wrote lyrics dedicated to the Warhammer 40 000 universe and used 40k artwork on the cover of their second album Realm of Chaos 90 In the early 1990s Games Workshop created its own short lived record company Warhammer Records The only band under this label was D Rok who published one album Oblivion in 1991 A fragment of D Rok s song Get Out of My Way was used in the computer game Space Hulk published by Electronic Arts in 1992 91 In the early 2000s the German label Art of Perception produced a 12 part soundtrack vinyl series followed by three CD compilations The task for the artists involved in this project was to conduct a theme for a species from the Warhammer 40 000 universe 92 In 2009 the Singaporean death metal band Deus Ex Machina released I Human which makes numerous references to the Warhammer 40 000 universe particularly the Adeptus Mechanicus faction 93 In 2007 and 2015 the German death metal band Debauchery released several songs about the Chaos God Khorne Praise the Blood God True To The Skull Throne And Bound To Kill and Blood For The Blood God 94 Film edit Games Workshop announced that Exile Studios would produce a CGI movie based upon the Bloodquest graphic novel a trailer was released but the project was discontinued and Exile Studios disbanded 95 For the 25th Anniversary Games Day Games Workshop released in 1996 for limited sale a short movie entitled Inquisitor 96 using clips and footage that was created as a pitch to G W for a film deal There were also trailers for two other films Hive Infestation and Blood for the Blood God Hive Infestation pitted Space Wolf terminators against a genestealer cult infestation of a hive world Blood for the Blood God was the second trailer released and portrayed orks and Dark Angel marines fighting along with an inquisitor much in the style of the Epic 40 000 video game cut scenes but little information was given on this short film aside from a shot of a berserker of Khorne available in YouTube but flagged by Games Workshop removing the movie 97 Another one was Damnatus a German fan film developed over four years Games Workshop announced in July 2007 that they would not give permission for the film to be released because of issues between Anglo American copyright and Continental European Droit d auteur 96 In 2010 Games Workshop with Codex Pictures released a 70 minute downloadable film called Ultramarines The screenplay was written by Black Library author Dan Abnett Terence Stamp Sean Pertwee and John Hurt head the cast of voice actors 98 On 5 August 2021 Games Workshop launched Warhammer Plus a subscription service that provides access to exclusive Warhammer themed shows and animations as well as other content such as classic issues of the White Dwarf magazine and exclusive miniatures 99 100 References edit a b c Annual Results 2022 PDF Games Workshop Retrieved 16 February 2023 Livingstone Ian April 1975 Editorial Owl and Weasel Games Workshop 3 2 Four things we should thank Games Workshop for Nerdist 20 January 2016 Retrieved 2 March 2018 Ian Livingstone and Steve Jackson interview GamesRadar 24 August 2007 Retrieved 18 January 2016 a b Livingstone Ian April 1977 White Dwarf Owl and Weasel Games Workshop 25 6 Jackson Steve February 1975 Editorial Owl and Weasel Games Workshop 1 1 Livingstone Ian January 1976 Editorial Owl and Weasel Games Workshop 12 2 Dice Men Games Workshop 1975 to 1985 Ian Livingstone and Steve Jackson with Jamie Thomson Unbound 11 January 2017 ISBN 9781407181301 Retrieved 2 March 2018 A new dungeon for Games Workshop White Dwarf Games Workshop 7 23 June July 1978 Google Maps Google Maps Retrieved 18 September 2020 OpenStreetMap OpenStreetMap Retrieved 18 September 2020 News White Dwarf Games Workshop 11 10 February March 1979 Baxter Stephen 2006 Freedom in an Owned World Warhammer Fiction and the Interzone Generation Vector Magazine the Critical Journal of the British Science Fiction Association British Science Fiction Association 229 Archived from the original on 16 February 2012 Retrieved 2007 02 07 Sacco Ciro Alessandro The Ultimate Interview with Gary Gygax thekyngdoms com Archived from the original on 8 February 2012 Retrieved 24 October 2008 News White Dwarf Games Workshop 4 White Dwarf White Dwarf Games Workshop 126 June 1990 Our history Games Workshop Group PLC Investor Relations 7 February 2011 Retrieved 15 June 2019 McGrath Melanie 2 June 1998 A Visit to the Fantasy World of Ian Livingstone The Independent Retrieved 11 January 2018 ECI Partners Exits Games Workshop Group Mergr mergr com Games Workshop London Stock Exchange Retrieved 2 March 2018 Willow Road Lenton Times Retrieved 2 March 2018 THQ extends Warhammer 40K licensing deal Engadget 26 November 2004 Retrieved 2 March 2018 Games Workshop declares war on best customers Again Boing Boing boingboing net 28 November 2009 GW Fansites vs GW Cease amp Desist Fallout Forum DakkaDakka Retrieved 11 February 2013 Games Workshop Changes Retrieved 31 May 2020 WarGameStore 18 June 2013 Games Workshop UK Retailer Trade Terms Changes 2013 Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 via YouTube Retirement of Tom Kirby as non executive chairman Games Workshop Group PLC Investor Relations 25 July 2017 Retrieved 15 June 2019 Clayton Natalie 21 July 2021 Games Workshop is trying to shut down fan animations PC Gamer Retrieved 7 September 2021 Creative Assembly reiterates stance on Total Warhammer mods in wake of Games Workshop IP changes PCGamesN 5 August 2021 Retrieved 7 September 2021 Lookout YouTube GW Just Updated Their IP Guidelines Spikey Bits 21 July 2021 Retrieved 7 September 2021 Why Games Workshop is worth more than Marks amp Spencer and Centrica The Economist 2 July 2020 Retrieved 25 August 2021 Haley Guy January 2005 The History of White Dwarf White Dwarf Games Workshop 300 Newsboard White Dwarf Games Workshop 58 October 1984 Livingstone Ian March 1985 Editorial White Dwarf Games Workshop 63 Haley Guy May 2005 Thirty Years of Games Workshop White Dwarf Games Workshop 304 Schick Lawrence 1991 Heroic Worlds A History and Guide to Role Playing Games Prometheus Books p 51 ISBN 0 87975 653 5 What is The Hobbit An Unexpected Journey Strategy Battle Game Forge World Retrieved 2 March 2018 Note that these figures are 25 mm and not the 28 mm figures that are more popular today Painting the Lord of the Rings Mines of Moria Game 23 November 2005 Retrieved 17 July 2007 The Battle of Five Armies The Stuff of Legends Retrieved 2 March 2018 Warner Bros Continues Hobbit Games License Global www licensemag com Warhammer Forge World Retrieved 2 March 2018 Forge World Raise Prices Substantially For US Customers Spikey Bits spikeybits com 22 August 2018 Retrieved 28 August 2018 Warhammer com Is Here The New Home of the World s Greatest Miniatures Warhammer Community Warpartefacts com www warpartefacts com Paton Maynard Are Small Companies Suitable For Long Term Portfolios 22 November 2001 McVey Mike 1992 Citadel Miniatures Painting Guide Nottingham Games Workshop p 1 ISBN 1 872372 61 9 Ellis Caelyn 13 June 2022 Warhammer 40K spin off Horus Heresy is back here s why that s a big deal and why you should be interested Dicebreaker Retrieved 27 June 2022 Boxed Games www games workshop com 30 December 2019 Retrieved 30 December 2019 Warhammer Quest Shadows over Hammerhal www games workshop com 30 December 2019 Retrieved 30 December 2019 Dragon Masters BoardGameGeek Grim Hammers Games Workshop Retrieved 11 February 2013 Review The new Citadel Paint Range Tale of Painters Retrieved 12 October 2015 Citadel Colour paint types Citadel Colour Retrieved 1 August 2020 Pre order Today Contrast and a Great Deal of Paint Warhammer Community Retrieved 1 August 2020 Complete List of Contrast New amp Discontinued Citadel Paints Spikey Bits 30 May 2019 Retrieved 2 August 2020 Press release on Games Workshops properties Archived 9 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine from Fantasy Flight Games website Appelcline Shannon 2014 Designers amp dragons 80 89 a history of the roleplaying game industry 2nd ed Silver Springs MD USA Evil Hat Productions ISBN 978 1 61317 081 6 Appelcline Shannon 2014 Designers amp Dragons The 00s Evil Hat Productions ISBN 978 1 61317 087 8 Schick Lawrence 1991 Heroic worlds a history and guide to role playing games Buffalo Prometheus Books ISBN 0 87975 652 7 Appelcline Shannon 2014 Designers amp Dragons 70 79 A history of the roleplaying game industry 2nd ed Silver Springs MD USA Evil Hat Productions ISBN 978 1 61317 075 5 A New Path Forward www fantasyflightgames com Retrieved 18 November 2016 Boxed Games Games Workshop Webstore www games workshop com Retrieved 18 November 2016 Tower of Despair for Commodore 64 1985 MobyGames MobyGames Games Day Programme Owl and Weasel Games Workshop 11 December 1975 a b c Battle Games in Middle earth Issue 56 Third War for Armageddon Campaign Site Games Workshop Archived from the original on 7 June 2007 Retrieved 30 June 2007 Eye of Terror Campaign Site Games Workshop Retrieved 30 June 2007 Storm of Chaos Campaign Site Games Workshop Archived from the original on 26 June 2007 Retrieved 30 June 2007 The War of the Ring Campaign Site United Kingdom Games Workshop Archived from the original on 27 June 2007 Retrieved 30 June 2007 The War of the Ring Campaign Site Canada Games Workshop Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 30 June 2007 The Fall of Medusa V Campaign Site Games Workshop Archived from the original on 25 June 2007 Retrieved 30 June 2007 Nemesis Crown Campaign Site Games Workshop Archived from the original on 30 June 2007 Retrieved 30 June 2007 Scourge of the Storm Site Games Workshop Archived from the original on 20 July 2011 Retrieved 24 July 2011 Wrath of Umbar Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Cavatore Alessio January 2006 Victory for the Free Peoples White Dwarf Games Workshop 312 Specialist Games Retrieved 2 March 2018 Fanatic Online Lexicanum Retrieved 2 March 2018 Fighting Fantasy Warlock Magazine Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 2 March 2018 Battle Games in Middle Earth Retrieved 2 March 2018 Barnett David 7 February 2013 Superheroes space marines and lawyers get into trademark fight The Guardian Retrieved 8 February 2013 Row blows up over ownership of space marine term bbc co uk BBC 8 February 2013 Retrieved 19 August 2013 Cory Doctorow 6 February 2013 Games Workshop trademark bullying goes thermonuclear now they say you can t use space marine in science fiction Retrieved 11 February 2013 Corynne McSherry 8 February 2013 Trademark Bully Thwarted Spots the Space Marine Back Online EFF Retrieved 11 February 2013 Games Workshop Space Marine Trademark Battle Erupts As Sci Fi Fans Point To History Huffington Post UK 8 February 2013 Retrieved 11 February 2013 Hogarth MCA The Return of Spots the Space Marine MCAH Online Archived from the original on 14 February 2013 Retrieved 16 February 2013 Interview with John Blanche seangoblin blogspot com 27 April 2009 Inferno Locus Index to Science Fiction Hammer and Bolter Lexicanum Retrieved 2 March 2018 Blood for the Blood God Metal Archives Retrieved 16 February 2023 BBC Radio 1 Keeping it PeelArtist A Z Retrieved 4 March 2007 Warhammer Records Discogs Retrieved 2 March 2018 Art of Perception Archived from the original on 22 April 2009 Retrieved 2 March 2018 Deus Ex Machina I Human album review Sputnikmusic 10 March 2010 Retrieved 11 February 2013 DEBAUCHERY BLOOD GOD amp BALGEROTH OFFICIAL 1 October 2015 DEBAUCHERY BLOOD FOR THE BLOOD GOD official video 2015 Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Retrieved 15 June 2019 via YouTube tsabo 4 May 2006 Bloodquest Trailer YouTube Archived from the original on 11 December 2021 Retrieved 11 February 2013 a b Walliss John 7 January 2010 Fan filmmaking and copyright in a global world Warhammer 40 000 fan films and the case of Damnatus Transformative Works and Cultures 5 doi 10 3983 twc 2010 0178 via journal transformativeworks org Blood for the Blood God 10 May 2017 Retrieved 2 March 2018 Ultramarines A Warhammer 40 000 Movie 2010 Preview Sci Fi Movie Page 13 December 2010 Retrieved 11 February 2013 Marshall Cass 23 June 2021 Warhammer Plus streaming sub will include animation free minis and White Dwarf Polygon Retrieved 7 September 2021 Warhammer Warhammer Retrieved 7 September 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Games Workshop Official website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Games Workshop amp oldid 1185835664 Group divisions, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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