Avalon Hill has published games as an independent developer and publisher, through its subsidiary Victory Games, its video game divisions, and later as a brand of Hasbro.
Avalon Hill Games Inc. Is a game company that specializes in wargames and strategic board games.Its logo contains its initials 'AH', and the company is now often referred to by this abbreviation. Before its takeover by Hasbro, it was known as The Avalon Hill Game Company and the initials TAHGC.It has also published miniature wargaming rules, role-playing games and sports simulations.
Original Avalon Hill[edit]
Some of these were originally developed independently and repackaged/republished by Avalon Hill. The games came in two formats: the earlier games were traditional flat-box packaging, and a later series introduced bookcase compact format packaging.
Name | Year | Notes |
---|---|---|
1776 | 1974 | American Revolution |
1830 | 1986 | |
1914 | 1968 | World War I |
Acquire | 1976 | formerly published by 3M;[1]p5,12[2] republished by Hasbro/WOTC's AH |
Adel Verpflichtet | 1991 | |
Advanced Squad Leader[3] | 1985 | Follow-on game to Squad Leader; republished by Multi-Man Publishing |
Advanced Third Reich | 1992 | |
Afrika Korps | 1964, 1965, 1977 | |
Age of Renaissance | 1996 | later published by Eurogames/Jeux Descartes |
Air Assault on Crete | 1978 | |
Air Baron | 1996 | |
Air Empire[3] | 1961 | |
Air Force | 1980 | First published by Battleline Publications in 1976 |
Alexander the Great | 1975 | First published in 1971 by Guidon Games |
Alpha Omega | 1980 | First published Battleline Publications in 1977 |
Amoeba Wars | 1981 | |
Anzio | 1969, 1971, 1974, 1978 | |
Arab-Israeli Wars | 1977 | |
Atlantic Storm | 1997 | |
Assassin | 1993 | |
Attack Sub | 1991 | |
Auto Racing | 1979 | |
B-17, Queen of the Skies | 1983 | |
Bali | 1980 | |
Banzai | 1984 | An Up Front expansion |
Baseball Strategy[4] | 1962 | privately published by Tom Shaw in 1959[1]7 |
Basketball Strategy[4] | 1973 | |
Battle for Italy | 1983 | |
Battle of the Bulge | 1965, 1991 | |
Beat Inflation | 1975 | |
Bismarck | 1962, 1979 | Sinking of the Bismarck |
Bitter Woods: the Battle of the Bulge | 1998 | |
Black Spy | 1981 | |
Blackbeard | 1991 | |
Blitzkrieg | 1965 | |
Book of Lists | 1979 | |
Bowl Bound | 1978 | College football |
Breakout: Normandy | 1993 | |
Britannia | 1986 | First published by Gibsons Games |
Bureaucracy | 1981 | |
Business Strategy | 1973 | |
C&O/B&O | 1969 | 'The Game of Railroading' |
Caesar | 1976 | Caesar at Alesia |
Caesar's Legions | 1975 | |
Candidate | 1991 | |
Chancellorsville | 1961, 1974 | |
Challenge Golf at Pebble Beach | 1976 | formerly published by 3M |
Circus Maximus | 1980 | Chariot racing in the spirit of Ben Hur |
Civil War | 1961 | |
Civilization | 1982 | |
Advanced Civilization | 1991 | |
Class Struggle[5] | 1982 | |
The Collector | 1977 | |
Conquistador | 1983 | First published by SPI in 1976 |
D-Day | 1961, 1965, 1971, 1977, 1991 | |
Dark Emperor | 1985 | |
Devil's Den | 1985 | |
Diplomacy[5] | 1961, 1977 | First published by Games Research in 1961 |
Dispatcher | 1958[3] | |
Doll House Game | 1963 | |
Down With the King | 1981 | |
The Dr. Ruth Game | 1985[5] | |
Dragon Pass | 1984 | Under Chaosium licence, who first published the game in 1975 under the title White Bear and Red Moon[6] |
Dragonhunt | 1982 | |
Dune | 1979 | |
Dauntless | 1981 | formerly Battleline; uses Air Force game system |
Elric | 1984 | Under Chaosium license, who first published the game in 1978[6] |
Empire of the Rising Sun | 1995 | |
Empires in Arms | 1986 | First published by Australian Design Group in 1983 |
Enemy in Sight | 1981 | |
Executive Decision | 1981 | formerly published by 3M |
Facts in Five | 1976 | formerly published by 3M |
Feudal | 1976 | formerly published by 3M |
Firepower | 1984 | |
Flat Top | 1981 | First published by Battleline in 1977 |
Flight Leader | 1986 | |
Football Strategy | 1960[4] | privately published by Tom Shaw in 1959[1]7 |
Foreign Exchange | 1979 | |
Fortress Europa | 1980 | First published by Jedko Games in 1978 |
France 1940 | 1972 | First published by SPI in 1971 |
Frederick the Great | 1982 | First published by SPI in 1975 |
Fredericksburg | 1982 | A war game simulating the battle of Fredericksburg in the American Civil War. |
Freedom in the Galaxy | 1981 | Originally published by SPI |
Fury in the West | 1979 | First published by Battleline Publications in 1977 |
The Game of Dilemmas | 1982 | |
The Game of Inventions | 1984 | |
Game of Slang | 1981 | |
Game of Trivia | 1981 | |
Gangsters | 1992 | |
Guerilla | 1994 | |
Geronimo | 1995 | |
Gettysburg | 1958,[3] 1961, 1964, 1977, 1988, 1989 | |
Gladiator | 1981 | |
Gold! | 1981 | |
Greed | 1986 | |
Guadalcanal | 1966 | Land Combat |
Guadalcanal | 1992 | Naval Combat |
Guns of August | 1981 | |
Gunslinger | 1983 | |
Hannibal: Rome vs. Carthage | 1996 | |
Hexagony | 1980 | |
History of the World | 1993 | |
Hitler's War | 1984 | First published by Metagaming Concepts in 1981 |
Hundred Days Battles | 1983 | |
IDF (Israeli Defense Force) | 1993 | |
Image | 1979 | |
Imagination | 1963 | pre-school children's line, revised in 1969[1]p7 |
Insolvency | 1990[5] | |
Intern | 1979 | |
Journeys of St. Paul | 1968 | |
Jutland | 1967, 1974 | |
Kampfgruppe Peiper I | 1993 | ASL module |
Kampfgruppe Peiper II | 1996 | ASL module |
Kingmaker | 1974 | |
Knights of the Air | 1987 | |
Kremlin | 1988 | |
Kriegspiel | 1970 | |
Le Mans[3] | 1961 | |
Legend of Robin Hood | 1980 | First published by Operational Studies Group in 1979 |
London's Burning | 1996 | |
The Longest Day | 1980 | |
Lords of Creation | 1983 | Role-playing game[7] |
Luftwaffe | 1971 | |
Machiavelli | 1980 | |
Management[3] | 1961 | |
Magic Realm | 1978 | |
MBT | 1989 | |
Merchant of Venus | 1988 | |
Midway | 1964, 1991 | 2 player game of the Battle of Midway; 1964 version uses squares, 1991 uses hexes. |
Monsters Ravage America | 1998 | |
Moonstar | 1981 | |
Mystic Wood | 1980 | licensed from designer & published in UK by Gibson Games and Ariel |
Napoleon | 1977 | |
Napoleon at Bay | 1983 | |
Napoleon's Battles | 1989 | |
Naval War | 1983 | First published by Battleline in 1979 |
New World | 1990 | |
Nieuchess | 1961 | |
OD | 1985 | |
Oh Wah Ree | 1976 | formerly published by 3M |
On To Richmond | 1998 | |
Origins of World War II | 1971 | |
Outdoor Survival[3] | 1972 | |
Panzer Armee Afrika | 1982 | First published by SPI in 1973 |
PanzerBlitz[3] | 1970 | |
Panzergruppe Guderian | 1984 | First published by SPI in 1976 |
Panzerkrieg | 1983 | Originally published by OSG |
Panzer Leader | 1974 | |
Past Lives | 1988 | |
Patton's Best | 1987 | |
Paydirt | 1979 | American football |
Pennant Race | 1983 | Baseball |
Perilous Lands | 1985 | A Powers & Perils adventure, published as a BookCase Game |
The Peter Principle | 1981 | |
Platoon | 1986 | |
Pogs | 1995 | public domain[8] |
Point of Law | 1979 | formerly published by 3M |
Powers & Perils | 1983 | Role-playing game[7] |
Pro Golf | 1982 | |
Republic of Rome | 1990 | |
Raid on St. Nazaire | 1987 | |
Rail Baron | 1977 | |
Regatta | 1979 | formerly published by 3M |
Richthofen's War | 1972 | World War I aerial combat |
Rise and Decline of the Third Reich | 1976, 1981 | |
Risque | 1985 | |
Road Kill | 1993 | |
Roads to Gettysburg | 1994 | |
RuneQuest | 1984 | roleplaying game, 3rd Edition under license from Chaosium[6] |
The Russian Campaign | 1977 | First published by Jedko Games in 1974 |
Russian Front | 1985 | |
Samurai | 1980 | |
Shakespeare | 1970 | |
Slapshot | 1982 | A hockey board game |
Sleuth | 1981 | formerly published by 3M |
Source of the Nile | 1979 | African exploration |
Speed Circuit | 1971, 1977 | formerly published by 3M |
Spices of the World | 1988 | |
Squad Leader | 1977 | WWII tactical combat |
Cross of Iron | 1978 | Squad Leader Module |
Crescendo of Doom | 1979 | Squad Leader Module |
GI: Anvil of Victory | 1982 | Squad Leader Module |
Squander | 1965 | |
Stalingrad | 1963, 1974 | |
Starship Troopers | 1976, 1997 | |
Statis Pro Baseball[3] | 1978 | Updated player cards each year until 1992 |
Statis Pro Basketball[3] | 1978 | Updated player cards each year until 1992 |
Statis Pro Football[3] | 1978 | Updated player cards each year until 1992 |
Stellar Conquest | 1984 | From Metagaming Concepts |
Stocks and Bonds | 1978 | formerly published by 3M |
Stock Market | 1970 | |
Stock Market Guru | 1997 | |
Stonewall Jackson's Way | 1992 | |
Stonewall in the Valley | 1995 | |
Stonewall's Last Battle | 1996 | |
Storm Over Arnhem | 1981 | |
Struggle of Nations | 1982 | |
Submarine | 1978 | First published by Battleline Publications in 1976 |
Successors | 1997 | |
Superstar Baseball | 1978 | |
Tac Air | 1988 | NATO vs. Warsaw Pact Air/Land doctrine |
Tactics | 1952,[3] 1983 | |
Tactics II | 1958,[3] 1961, 1972 | |
Tales from the Floating Vagabond | 1991 | Role playing |
Third Reich | 1976, 1981 | WWII grand strategy |
Advanced Third Reich | 1992 | |
Titan | 1982 | Fantasymonster combat |
Titan: the Arena | 1997 | |
Thunder at Cassino | 1987 | |
Trireme | 1980 | First published by Battleline Publications in 1979 |
Tobruk | 1975 | |
Tower of the Dead | 1984 | A Powers & Perils adventure |
Trucks, Trains, Boats & Planes | 1963 | pre-school children's line[1]p7 |
Tuf | 1969 | |
Tuf*Abet | 1969 | |
Turning Point: Stalingrad | 1989 | Area movement simulation of the Battle of Stalingrad. |
TV Wars | 1987 | |
TwixT | 1976 | formerly published by 3M[1]p5,12[2] |
U-Boat | 1959, 1961 | |
UFO | 1978 | |
Up Front | 1983 | A World War IIcard-basedwargame |
Venture | 1983 | formerly published by 3M |
Verdict | 1959[3] | |
Verdict II | 1961 | |
Victory in the Pacific | 1977 | Pacific War |
Vikings | 1985 | RuneQuest module |
War and Peace | 1980 | |
War at Sea | 1976 | First published by Jedko Games in 1975 |
War at Sea II | 1980 | |
Waterloo | 1962 | |
the Wedding Game | 1990[5] | |
What Time Is It? | 1963 | pre-school children's line[1]p7 |
Win, Place & Show | 1966 | Horse racing simulation |
Wizards | 1982 | |
Wizard's Quest | 1979 | |
Wooden Ships and Iron Men | 1975 | Naval combat 1776 to 1814 |
Word Power | 1967 | |
Wrasslin | 1990 | Pro wrestling simulation |
Yanks | 1987 | ASL module |
Year of the Lord | 1968 | |
Yellowstone | 1985 |
Victory Games[edit]
Name | Year | Description |
---|---|---|
1809 | 1984 | |
2nd Fleet | 1986 | |
3rd Fleet | 1990 | |
5th Fleet | 1989 | |
6th Fleet | 1985 | |
7th Fleet | 1987 | |
A Nightmare on Elm Street | 1987 | |
Across 5 Aprils | 1992 | |
Aegean Strike | 1986 | |
Ambush! | 1983 | A single player man-to-man wargame set in World War II France |
Battle Hymn | 1986 | |
Carrier | 1990 | |
Central America | 1987 | |
The Civil War: 1861-1865 | 1983 | |
Cold War | 1984 | |
Desert Shield | October 1990 | A Gulf Strike Expansion Module, two printings in 1990[9][10] |
Flashpoint Golan | 1991 | |
France 1944 | 1986 | |
Gulf Strike | 1983 | updated 1988, new box art 1990[5] |
Hell's Highway | 1983 | |
James Bond 007 | 1983 | |
The Korean War | 1986 | |
Lee vs. Grant | 1988 | |
Mosby's Raiders | 1985 | |
NATO: The Next War in Europe | 1983 | |
Omaha Beachhead | 1987 | |
Open Fire | 1987 | |
Pacific War | 1985 | |
Panzer Command | 1984 | |
Pax Britannica | 1985 | |
The Peloponnesian War | 1991 | |
Shell Shock | 1992 | |
Theater Analysis Model | 1983 | |
Tokyo Express | 1988 | |
Vietnam | 1984 |
Video games[edit]
Name | Year | Description |
---|---|---|
1830: Railroads & Robber Barons | 1995 | Adaptation of the Avalon Hill board game, 1830. |
5th Fleet | 1994 | |
Achtung Spitfire! | 1997 | |
Andromeda Conquest | 1982 | |
Avalon Hill's Advanced Civilization | 1995 | |
B-1 Nuclear Bomber | 1981 | |
Cave Wars | 1996 | |
Computer Football Strategy | 1983 | |
Conflict 2500[11] | 1980 | Player's warships seek and destroy invading berserkers |
Death Trap | 1995 | |
Defiance | 1998 | Under Visceral Productions |
Dnieper River Line | ||
Empire of the Overmind | 1981 | |
Flight Commander 2 | 1994 | early release by Avalon Hill Software, AH's second foray into video games[8] |
Galaxy | 1981 | Originally Galactic Empires, by Tom Cleaver |
GFS Sorceress | 1982 | |
History of the World | 1997 | |
Incunabula | 1984 | |
Legionnaire (video game) | 1982 | |
London Blitz | ||
Lords of Karma | 1980 | |
Midway Campaign | 1980 | |
North Atlantic Convoy Raider | ||
Nukewar | ||
Over the Reich | 1996 | |
Out of Control | 1997 | |
Planet Miners | ||
Ripper! | ||
Shuttle Orbiter | ||
Super Sunday | 1986 | |
Space Station Zulu | 1982 | |
Telengard | 1982 | |
T.G.I.F | 1983 | |
Third Reich | 1996 | |
Under Fire | 1985 | |
VC | ||
Voyager I | ||
Wall Ball | 1982 | |
Wooden Ship & Iron Men | 1996 |
Hasbro Avalon Hill[edit]
Some of these were originally developed independently and repackaged/republished by AH. Those marked re-issue were also previously published by AH before Hasbro bought the company.
Name | Year | Description |
---|---|---|
Acquire | 1999 | re-issue |
Axis and Allies | 2003 | Revised edition; Milton Bradley originally |
Axis and Allies: Battle of the Bulge | 2006 | |
Axis and Allies: D-Day | 2004 | |
Axis and Allies: Europe | 1999 | |
Axis and Allies Miniatures | 2005 | |
Axis and Allies: Pacific | 2001 | |
Battle Cry | 2000 | |
Betrayal at House on the Hill | 2004 | |
Cosmic Encounter | 2000 | Originally by Eon Games |
Diplomacy | 1999 | Re-issue |
The Great Dalmuti | 2005 | Originally by Wizards of the Coast |
Guillotine | 2005 | Originally by Wizards of the Coast |
History of the World | 2001 | Re-issue |
Monsters Menace America | 2005 | Re-development of Monsters Ravage America |
Nexus Ops | 2005 | |
Risk 2210 A.D. | 2001 | Risk variant |
Risk Godstorm | 2004 | Risk variant |
RoboRally | 2005 | Original game by Wizards of the Coast |
Rocketville | 2006 | |
Stratego: Legends | 1999 | Stratego variant |
Star Wars - The Queen's Gambit | 2000 | |
Sword and Skull | 2005 | |
Vegas Showdown | 2005 | |
Ikusa | 1986 | |
Betrayal at Baldur's Gate | 2017 |
References[edit]
- ^ abcdefg'The General Index and Company History'. The General Magazine Index and Company History. 1980. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- ^ abArneson, Erik. 'Hasbro - Brief History'. About Board Games. About.com. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
- ^ abcdefghijklmnRienzi, Greg (May 2009). 'Baltimore Observed: Encounter'. The Urbanite Magazine. Urbanite Baltimore. p. 35. Archived from the original on June 8, 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-11.
- ^ abc
- Arneson, Eric. 'Football Strategy'. About Board Games. About. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
- Arneson, Eric. 'Best Football Board Games'. About Board Games. About. Retrieved 15 July 2015.
- ^ abcdefEaston, Thomas (February 13, 1991). 'Games on war, debt aimed at capturing public mood'. Baltimore Sun. New York. Retrieved August 6, 2015.
- ^ abc
- Kim, John H. 'R: RuneQuest'. RPG Encyclopedia. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- Appelcline, Shannon (September 4, 2006). 'Chaosium: 1975-Present'. A Brief History of Game (3). RPG.net. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- ^ abKim, John H. 'RPG Company List: A: Avalon Hill'. Role-Playing Game Companies. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- ^ ab'Monarch Counts On Pc Games'. Baltimore Sun. February 17, 1995. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- ^Singletary, Michelle (March 20, 1991). 'Local firm's games sales aided by war'. Baltimore Sun. Retrieved August 6, 2015.
- ^Clark, Kim (December 9, 1990). 'Surviving tough economic times is no child's play for toy-makers Companies search for new markets'. Baltimore Sun. Retrieved August 6, 2015.
- ^Mishcon, Jon (November 1981). 'Capsule Reviews'. The Space Gamer. Steve Jackson Games (45): 33.
Subsidiary[1] | |
Founded | 1952 in Baltimore, Maryland |
---|---|
Headquarters | , |
Products | Board games |
Owner | Hasbro |
Parent | Hasbro Interactive (1998-2001) Wizards of the Coast (2004–present) |
Website | avalonhill.com |
Avalon Hill Games Inc. is a game company that specializes in wargames and strategicboard games. Its logo contains its initials 'AH', and the company is now often referred to by this abbreviation. Before its takeover by Hasbro, it was known as The Avalon Hill Game Company and the initials TAHGC. It has also published miniature wargaming rules, role-playing games and sports simulations. It is now a subsidiary[1] of the game company Wizards of the Coast, which is itself a subsidiary of Hasbro.[2]
Avalon Hill pioneered many of the concepts of modern recreational wargaming. These include elements such as the use of a hexagonal grid (a.k.a. hexgrid) overlaid on a flat folding board, zones of control (ZOC), stacking of multiple units at a location, an odds-based combat results table (CRT), terrain effects on movement, troop strength, morale, and board games based upon historical events. Complex games could and did take days or even weeks, and AH set up a system for people to play games by mail.[3][2]
- 1History
- 4Magazines
History[edit]
The Avalon Game Company[edit]
Avalon Hill was started in 1952 in Baltimore, Maryland by Charles S. Roberts under the name of 'The Avalon Game Company' for the publication of his game Tactics, considered the first of a new type of board game, the wargame.[3][4] Roberts sold Tactics on a mail order basis from his home in the Avalon neighborhood of Baltimore.[4] Following the success of Tactics, Roberts changed the name upon incorporation from 'The Avalon Game Company' to 'Avalon Hill' in 1958 because of an argument with another company.[3] The number of games released per year was erratic until 1964 as the company released anywhere from 1 to 7 games.[4]5-8
The first game published by the company under the name of 'Avalon Hill' was the second edition of Tactics, titled Tactics II, published in 1958.[3][5] AH published two other games that year, Gettysburg and the railroad game Dispatcher.[3]
In 1959, Roberts moved Avalon into an office space on Gay Street in Baltimore and took on its first outside designed game, Verdict, by two corporate lawyers. After another office move, in August 1960 Thomas N. Shaw, a high school friend of Roberts, was hired to design games.[3][4]6
In 1960, Avalon published the first mostly dice-less sports game in Football Strategy designed by Thomas N. Shaw which was followed by two sister games, Baseball Strategy and Basketball Strategy.[6][7] Of this sports strategy line, the football and baseball versions were previously privately published by Shaw in 1959.[4]7 With a recession occurring, debt began to pile up starting in 1961.[3] (A computer game version, Computer Football Strategy, was published by Avalon Hill in 1983.)
Avalon launched a pre-school children's line in 1963 with four games, Imagination, What Time Is It?, Doll House and Trucks, Trains, Boats & Planes, which flopped. Roberts gave up and planned to file bankruptcy on December 13, 1963.[4]p7 Instead his creditors, Monarch Office Services and J.E. Smith & Co. interceded and took over. Monarch had printed all but the boxes, which were done by J.E. Smith.[8]:175 The company was reorganized by retaining only one staff member, Shaw, moved, cut costs and appointed J.E. Sparling as president.[4]p7,8 In 1964, AH set a two-game per year release schedule.[4]5-8
Avalon Hill published Blitzkrieg in 1965. This game was an abstract combat game, featuring two sides (red and blue) and some neutral countries. Many rules variants were created for Blitzkrieg. The company also published simulations of actual battles and campaigns, such as Midway,Afrika Korps, and The Battle of the Bulge.
Avalon Hill published PanzerBlitz in 1970, designed for the company by Jim Dunnigan's Simulations Publications, Inc. (SPI) on a royalty basis from SPI's Tac Force 3 game.[4]p9
Monarch Avalon division[edit]
Monarch bought out J.E. Smith & Co., Avalon Hill's co-owner, on November 30, 1971. Thus the company became a division of a renamed Monarch Office Services, Monarch Avalon.[4]p10
The company acquired several successful games including Acquire, TwixT and Feudal from the purchase of 3M Games in February 1976.[4]p5,12[9] Sports Illustrated (SI) line of sports games were purchased in December 1976. Both lines increased the retail outlets that would take AH games. The Aladdin Industries game line was another acquisition in March 1977. With the SI line, the company started a sports game division in May 1977 with Bruce Milligan hired to head the division and launch All Star Replay sport games magazine. While from the 3M line, Facts in Five became its top selling game.[4]p5,12
During the 1970s, the company's golden years, Avalon Hill published a number of popular games such as Outdoor Survival, Panzer Blitz, Squad Leader, and the Statis Pro sports line.[3]
Avalon Hill also purchased many games from smaller companies and republished them. Heritage Models sold AH its Battleline Publications in October 1979.[4]p5,15 Much of the Battleline line, including Wooden Ships and Iron Men and Machiavelli (a variant of Diplomacy set in Renaissance Italy), was republished by Avalon Hill, along with the popular Diplomacy. AH also acquired Jedko Games' The Russian Campaign and War at Sea, and Hartland Trefoil's Civilization. 1830 was developed by Avalon Hill, but based on Francis Tresham's 1829.
In 1974, a new game developer attempted to pitch his concept to Avalon Hill. Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson had co-developed a new type of co-operative game that used role-playing. But when Gygax pitched Dungeons & Dragons to AH, the largest company in wargaming did not understand the concept of role-playing, and turned down his offer.[10] Gygax was forced to form TSR Inc in order to self-publish his game. In less than five years, TSR would be the dominant player in the new RPG market.
Avalon Hill finally entered the role-playing game market a decade later by publishing Powers and Perils in 1983 and Lords of Creation in 1984.[11] The licenses to RuneQuest and the board games White Bear & Red Moon (republished as Dragon Pass) and Elric, were acquired in a complex agreement in 1983 with Chaosium, and Avalon Hill published the 3rd Edition in 1984.[12][13] None of these role-playing games achieved the popularity of the long-established competitor, Dungeons & Dragons.
Avalon Hill became an early publisher of computer games in 1980[14] with its video game division Microcomputer Games, adapting some of its boardgame titles to various computer platforms (TRS-80, Vic-20, Commodore 64, Apple II, etc.) on several data formats (cassette tape and 5¼' disk). Sales of these products were decent, but the only outstanding success was Achtung Spitfire!, published relatively late in the company history.
Avalon Hill Board Games
Gulf Strike was introduced by the company in 1983 and was based on the Iran–Iraq War then updated after the cease-fire in 1988. AH published The Dr. Ruth Game in 1985 which sold initially well then dropped off.[15]
Facing an economic downturn in 1990 and a three year period of losses, Monarch Avalon closed its New York office, sold its toy division and reduced inventory. AH also published its timely game expansion, Desert Shield, that sold out in weeks after its October 1990 release such that a second print run hit the market in December 1990.[16][17] In 1991, Hobbycraft Canada was sharing office space with Monarch Avalon.[15]
AvalonCon World Boardgaming Championships was first held by AH in 1991.[18]
Avalon Hill Rulebooks
In December 1992, AH hired Jim Rose to lead its computer game division,[19] with the goal of reviving this part of the business in the face of flagging board game sales.[20] AH reentered the computer game market in 1994 with a good review of 'Flight Commander 2'. The company added Pogs to it game line up in 1995.[21] By June 1995, Rose had left the company to found TalonSoft.[22] In 1995, Monarch Avalon placed Avalon Hill up for sale but it was later withdrawn.[23]
Hasbro subsidiary[edit]
Monarch sold Avalon Hill to Hasbro Games on August 4, 1998 for $6 million.[24] Hasbro, largely seeking a computer gaming software company and known games to convert to interactive computer games per an Arcadia Investment Corp. investment analyst, purchased the rights to the Avalon Hill trademarks, copyrights, inventory, tooling and divisions, Avalon Hill Software and Victory Games.[23] Avalon Hill Games, Inc. was incorporated by Hasbro on March 2, 1998.[1][2]
Avalon was transferred to the control of Wizards of the Coast, another Hasbro subsidiary, in 2004.[9]
In 2000, Avalon released a redesigned edition of Cosmic Encounter in cooperation with its owner/developer Future Pastimes. This edition was not well received by players and Avalon did not follow up with any of the expected expansion sets.
Hasbro has released new titles under the Avalon Hill name, and added the Avalon Hill name to older games such as Axis and Allies that were not originally made by Avalon Hill.
Game rights[edit]
The rights to many of Avalon Hill's more complex games have been licensed or sold to other game publishers, or have reverted to their original owners and been republished by other companies:
- Multi-Man Publishing acquired a license to Advanced Squad Leader and the Great Campaigns of the American Civil War series, and has since published new materials for these. (It also had the rights to Up Front for many years, but never released a new version of the game.)
- Valley Games published new versions of Titan, Hannibal: Rome versus Carthage, and Republic of Rome.
- GMT Games published new editions of Avalon Hill's early card-driven wargames We the People (retitled Washington's War), Successors, and For the People, and a descendant of Advanced Third Reich/Empire of the Rising Sun named A World at War.
- Mayfair Games now has the rights to 1830 (one of several 18XX games they publish).
Avalon Hill Game Rules 2017
Victory Games[edit]
In 1982 Avalon Hill hired some of the design staff from Simulations Publications, Inc. (SPI) after that company was purchased by TSR, Inc, and formed them into a subsidiary company, Victory Games. SPI had specialized in wargames that were more complex and realistic simulations than those that Avalon Hill published. It also published games more frequently than Avalon Hill, which stayed with its two-a-year schedule of releases long after SPI began publishing boxed games monthly and as inserts via the magazine Strategy & Tactics. When Victory Games released a line of SPI-style games, it met with critical and commercial acclaim. Yet, as employees gradually departed for other game companies or more lucrative careers in defense analysis and government wargaming, the staff of Victory Games's New York City office on East 33rd Street shrank dramatically. But contrary to some accounts, Victory Games was not 'disbanded' in 1989. Rather, West End Games veteran Leonard Quam was brought aboard to breathe new life into the firm and hired Kevin Boylan as a product developer. Victory Games continued to develop and release new products (including 3rd Fleet and Carrier) for another three years, though the New York office closed in early 1991 after Quam left the company. Victory's final two games, Flashpoint Golan and Across Five Aprils, were developed by Boylan alone working remotely in collaboration with Avalon Hill's art department.[25]
Magazines[edit]
The General[edit]
Avalon Hill also had its own house organ which promoted sale and play of its games, The General Magazine, which was published regularly between 1964 and 1998. The magazine offered a wide array of features, including articles on both strategies of play and tactics for specific situations, historical analyses, semi-regular features devoted to individual games, columns on sports and computer games by AH, listings of vendors and opponents, answers to questions on game rules, ratings for both games and players, discount coupons for mail orders, and insider information on future AH projects.
Avalon Hill Trireme Game Rules
Heroes[edit]
In early 1984, on the occasion of the release of third edition RuneQuest, Avalon Hill included in all RuneQuest boxes a single advertising flyer (see image, right) announcing the launch of HEROES, its own role-playing magazine. HEROES ran for ten issues from 1984 to 1986[26] and had the main purpose to promote all four of Avalon Hill's role-playing games: James Bond 007, Lords of Creation, Powers and Perils, and RuneQuest.
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ abc'Business Entity Summary: AVALON HILL GAMES, INC'. Corporations Division Corporate Search. Massachusetts Secretary of Commonwealth. Archived from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- ^ abcCarlisle, Rodney (2009). Encyclopedia of Play in Today's Society. SAGE Publications. p. 53. ISBN9781452266107.
- ^ abcdefghRienzi, Greg (May 2009). 'Baltimore Observed: Encounter'. The Urbanite Magazine. Urbanite Baltimore. p. 35. Archived from the original on June 8, 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-11.
- ^ abcdefghijklm'The General Index and Company History'. The General Magazine Index and Company History. 1980. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- ^Arneson, Erik. 'Tactics II'. About Board/Card Games. About.com. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- ^Arneson, Eric. 'Football Strategy'. About Board Games. About. Archived from the original on July 15, 2015. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
- ^Arneson, Eric. 'Best Football Board Games'. About Board Games. About. Retrieved 15 July 2015.
- ^Shannon Appelcline (2011). Designers & Dragons. Mongoose Publishing. ISBN978-1-907702- 58-7.
- ^ abArneson, Erik. 'Hasbro - Brief History'. About Board Games. About.com. Archived from the original on 2008-04-15. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
- ^Hoffmann, Frank W.; Bailey, William G. (1991). Sports & Recreation Fads. Haworth Press. p. 109. ISBN1-56024-056-3.
- ^Kim, John H. 'RPG Company List: A: Avalon Hill'. Role-Playing Game Companies. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- ^Kim, John H. 'R: RuneQuest'. RPG Encyclopedia. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- ^Appelcline, Shannon (September 4, 2006). 'Chaosium: 1975-Present'. A Brief History of Game (3). RPG.net. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- ^Wilson, Johnny L. (November 1991). 'A History of Computer Games'. Computer Gaming World. p. 10. Retrieved 18 November 2013.
- ^ abEaston, Thomas (February 13, 1991). 'Games on war, debt aimed at capturing public mood'. Baltimore Sun. New York. Retrieved August 6, 2015.
- ^Singletary, Michelle (March 20, 1991). 'Local firm's games sales aided by war'. Baltimore Sun. Retrieved August 6, 2015.
- ^Clark, Kim (December 9, 1990). 'Surviving tough economic times is no child's play for toy-makers Companies search for new markets'. Baltimore Sun. Retrieved August 6, 2015.
- ^Keyser, Tom (August 7, 1994). 'Game maker makes right move with convention'. Baltimore Sun. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- ^Rose, Jim (1993). 'Silicon Simulations'. The General. 28 (4): 57.
- ^Greenwood, Don (1994). 'The Avalon Hill Philosophy Part 161: A Tale of Two Companies'. The General. 29 (2): 3.
- ^'Monarch Counts On Pc Games'. Baltimore Sun. February 17, 1995. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- ^Emrich, Alan (June 1995). 'Dealing with the Fog of War; G-2'. Computer Gaming World (131): 153, 154.
- ^ abLeffall, J. (August 5, 1998). 'Monarch Avalon to sell game unit to Hasbro In wake of loss, local company to get $6 million in cash'. Baltimore Sun. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- ^'The Fall of Avalon Hill'. Archived from the original on 2016-01-29. Retrieved 2015-10-25.
- ^The Complete Wargames HandbookArchived 2006-10-31 at the Wayback Machine Chapter 5: History of Wargames - Into the 1980s
- ^HEROES review from Shannon Appelcline's website
External links[edit]
- The Fall of Avalon Hill from GIS.net