Games Workshop
Games Workshop Group PLC is a British manufacturer of miniature wargames, based in Nottingham, England. Its best-known products are Warhammer Age of Sigmar and Warhammer 40,000. It is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 250 Index.
History
Early years
Founded in 1975 at 15 Bolingbroke Road, London 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.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 was founded in February 1975. This was superseded in June 1977 by White Dwarf.
From the outset, there was a clear, stated interest in print regarding "progressive games", including computer gaming, which led to the departure of John Peake in early 1976, who preferred "traditional games". The loss of Peake also meant the loss of the fledgling company's main source of income. However, having successfully obtained official distribution rights to Dungeons & Dragons and other TSR products in the U.K., and maintaining a high profile by running games conventions, the business grew rapidly. It opened its first retail shop in April 1978.
In early 1979 Games Workshop provided the funding to 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. For a time Gary Gygax promoted the idea of TSR, Inc. merging with Games Workshop, until Steve Jackson and Ian Livingstone backed out.
The company's publishing arm also released U.K. reprints of American RPGs such as Call of Cthulhu, Runequest, Traveller, and Middle-earth Role Playing, which were expensive to import.
In 1984 Games Workshop ceased distributing its products in the U.S.A. through hobby games distributors and opened its Games Workshop office. Games Workshop, and Games Workshop in general, grew significantly in the late 1980s, with over 250 employees on the payroll by 1990.
, Germany
Refocus
Tom Kirby became General Manager in 1986.Following a management buyout by him and Bryan Ansell in December 1991, when Livingstone and Jackson sold their shares for million, Games Workshop refocused on their miniature wargames Warhammer Fantasy Battle and Warhammer 40,000, 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. In October 1997 all U.K.-based operations were relocated to the current headquarters in Lenton, Nottingham.
By the end of the decade the company was having problems with falling profits, and blame was placed on the growth in popularity of collectible card games such as and Pokémon T.C.G..
The company diversified by acquiring Sabretooth Games, creating the Black Library, and working with THQ.
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.
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 U.K. The new terms and conditions restricted the sale of all Games Workshop products to within the European Economic Area.
On 16 June 2013, WarGameStore, a U.K.-based retailer of Games Workshop products since 2003, announced further changes to Games Workshop's trade agreement with U.K.-based independent stockists.
Tom Kirby stepped down in 2017.
Operations
Licensing
Alongside the UK publishing rights to several American role-playing games in the 1980s Games Workshop also secured the rights to produce miniatures or games for several classic British science fiction properties such as Doctor Who and several characters from 2000 AD including Rogue Trooper and Judge Dredd. Alongside the rights to reprint Iron Crown Enterprises' Middle-earth Role Playing, Citadel Miniatures acquired the rights to produce 28mm miniatures based on The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit.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 25mm scale was used. 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.
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.
Group Divisions
Games Workshop has expanded into several divisions/companies producing products related to the Warhammer universe.- Forge World makes complementary specialist resin miniatures and conversion kits as well as Specialist Games range. Forge World is 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. 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.
- 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.
Miniature games
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.Current core games
The following games were in production as of 2019:- Warhammer Age of Sigmar
- Warhammer 40,000
- Middle Earth Strategy Battle Game
Other games
- Adeptus Titanicus - A new version of the original game.
- Aeronautica Imperialis - Aerial combat game, updated from the Forge World version.
- Blood Bowl - an American football style game using fantasy creatures.
- Blackstone Fortress - a dungeon crawl game set in the Warhammer 40,000 universe.
- 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.
- Warhammer 40,000 Kill Team - A skirmish version of Warhammer 40,000, using the same factions and units.
- Warhammer Quest: Shadows over Hammerhal - dungeon crawl game in the universe. Despite sharing the Warhammer Quest brand, rules and setting are completely different from the original game.
- Warhammer: Underworlds - A game set in the Age of Sigmar setting combining miniature gaming and deck-building.
Out of print
''Warhammer Fantasy'' universe
- 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.
- 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 - 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
- Adeptus Titanicus
- *Codex Titanicus
- Advanced Space Crusade
- Assassinorum: Execution Force
- Bommerz over da Sulphur River
- Epic 40,000
- Gorkamorka
- * Digganob
- 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.
- Space Fleet
- Space Hulk
- * Deathwing
- * Genestealer
- * Space Hulk Campaigns
- Space Marine
- Titan Legions
- Tyranid Attack
- Ultra Marines
Specialist Games
- Warhammer Fantasy universe
- * Dreadfleet - a naval combat style board game 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 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 miniatures.
- * Inquisitor - a skirmish/role play game using larger 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 miniatures. The game was named after 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.
Forge World
- Aeronautica Imperialis - a game based around Epic scale aircraft combat
Licensed games
- Battle Masters
- HeroQuest
- * Kellar's Keep
- *Return of the Witch Lord
- *Against the Ogre Horde
- *Wizards of Morcar
- *The Frozen Horror
- *The Magic of the Mirror
- *The Dark Company
- *HeroQuest Adventure Design Kit
- *Adventure Design Booklet
- Space Crusade
- * Mission Dreadnought
- * Eldar Attack
Citadel Paints
The Citadel Paints listings include:
- Citadel Base: acrylic base-coating matte paints in 12 ml pots.
- Citadel Layer: to be used over Base or other paints. In 12 ml pots.
- Citadel Contrast: to be used over a sprayed base as a way to quickly paint models whilst replicating highlighting and shading effects. In 18 ml pots.
- Citadel Shade: paints that flow over other paints and into recesses. In 24 ml pots.
- Citadel Edge: similar to Citadel Layer Paints, but in lighter shades. In 12 ml pots.
- Citadel Dry: thicker than other paints, for fast drybrushing and highlighting. In 12 ml pots.
- Citadel Glaze: to intensify colour, providing a translucent layer. In 12 ml pots.
- Citadel Texture: for detailing bases. They contain a mixture of coarse and fine grit producing a grainy surface. In 12 ml pots.
- Citadel Air: airbrush paints matching other Citadel paints. In 12 ml containers.
- Citadel Technical: nine specialist formulas for specific painting and modelling functions. In 12 ml pots.
Role-playing games
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.
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
- Golden Heroes - a superhero roleplaying game, published in 1984 after initially being published on an amateur basis.
- - published under licence in 1985.
- Stormbringer - the third edition of the game, published jointly with Chaosium in 1987.
- RuneQuest - GW published the second and third edition rules in the UK.
- Call of Cthulhu - GW published the second and third edition rules in the UK
Out of print, republished
- Dark Heresy - an RPG based in the WH40k Universe where players control one member of an Inquisitor's retinue.
- Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay
Boxed games
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.
Games Workshop currently has several standalone board games in production. 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.
- 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
- Apocalypse
- Battlecars
- Battle for Armageddon
- * Chaos Attack
- Block Mania - 2000AD Judge Dredd setting
- * Mega Mania
- Blood Royale
- Calamity
- Chainsaw Warrior
- Cosmic Encounter
- Curse of the Mummy's Tomb
- Dark Future
- 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
- Kings and Things
- Oi! Dat's My Leg!
- Quirks
- Railway Rivals
- Rogue Trooper
- Squelch!
- Space Hulk
- Super Power
- Trolls in the Pantry
- Valley of the Four Winds
- Warlock
- The Warlock of Firetop Mountain
Out of print, republished
- Chaos Marauders - A boardgame of 'orcish mayhem'.
- Dungeonquest
- Fury of Dracula
- Horus Heresy
- Talisman
- Warrior Knights
Video games
- ' based on the original boardgame
- Argent Warrior Illustrated adventure
- Battlecars 2 player racing game written in BASIC
- Chaos multiplayer turn based "board" game, written by Julian Gollop
- D-Day based on the Normandy Landings
- HeroQuest based on the MB board game
- Journey's End text adventure
- Key Of Hope, The text adventure
- Ringworld text adventure
- Runestone text adventure
- Talisman multiplayer turn based "board" game
- Tower Of Despair text adventure, also released for the Commodore 64.
- Space Crusade and 1 sequel for the Amiga.
- Dark Omen
- Shadow of the Horned Rat
- Space Hulk
- '
- Final Liberation
- Fire Warrior
- Blood Bowl, published by MicroLeague
- Dawn of War
- * Winter Assault
- * Dark Crusade
- * Soulstorm
- Chaos Gate
- Rites of War
- Mark of Chaos
- * '
- Squad Command, a turn based strategy game which focuses on a squad of Ultramarines fighting Chaos Space Marines.
- ', 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.
- * Chaos Rising
- * '
- Blood Bowl /Blood Bowl 2
- ', an Action/RPG game featuring the Ultramarines Space Marines.
- ', a Warhammer MOBA game developed by BioWare Mythic.
- ', a massively multiplayer online third-person shooter game developed by Behaviour Interactive.
- ', 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
- ', a first-person action video game developed by Fatshark. Set in the Warhammer Fantasy fictional universe, players battle cooperatively against the Chaos army and the Skaven.
- ', a Real-time and Turn-based Strategy game, part of SEGA and Creative Assembly's Total War Series
- ' 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. a real-time strategy video game with MOBA influences released by Relic Entertainment and Sega, in partnership with Games Workshop,
Tactical Card Games (TCGs)
Events
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.Worldwide campaigns
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. 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 :
- 1995 - The Battle of Ichar IV
- 2000 - Third War for Armageddon
- 2001 - Dark Shadows
- 2003 - Eye of Terror
- 2004 - Storm of Chaos
- 2005 - The War of the Ring
- 2006 - The Fall of Medusa V
- 2007 - The Nemesis Crown
- 2011 - Scourge of the Storm
Magazines
Games Workshop's has published the White Dwarf magazine since 1977 and has over 400 issues. Games Workshop also published Fanatic Magazine in support of their Specialist Games range. After the cancellation of Fanatic Magazine, an electronic version, known as "Fanatic Online" was published from Games Workshop's Specialist Games website.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.
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 and published by De Agostini.
''Spots the Space Marine'' trademark complaint
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. Commentators such as Cory Doctorow and digital rights group the Electronic Frontier Foundation, questioned the right of Games Workshop to trademark the term. On 8 February 2013, Spots the Space Marine reappeared on Amazon. Games Workshop has issued no further legal action.Other media
Games Workshop illustrators also published artbooks covering parts of their commissioned work for the company. Amongst them, one can find Adrian Smith, Ian Miller and John Blanche.Short fiction
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. 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.Novels
Comics and graphic novels
Music
In November 1987 "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.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.
In the early 1990s Games Workshop created its own short-lived record company, Warhammer Records. The only band under this label was D-Rok. 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.
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.
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.
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 "Blood For The Blood God".
Film
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.For the 25th Anniversary Games Day, Games Workshop released in 1996 a short movie entitled Inquisitor, using clips and footage that was created as a pitch to G.W. for a movie 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.
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 movie to be released because of issues between Anglo-American copyright and Continental European Droit d'auteur.
In 2010 Games Workshop with Codex Pictures released a 70-minute downloadable movie called . The screenplay was written by Black Library author Dan Abnett. Terence Stamp, Sean Pertwee and John Hurt head the cast of voice actors.