Did you know Warhammer was originally almost called Battleblade? Come see the secrets to how Games Workshop really got started 40 years ago.
Have you ever heard of someone opening a ‘game store’ but then having to resort to living in their car to afford the bills? No real business would even function like that and ever be successful right?
Well we may all be wrong with our assumptions, as it appears that is EXACTLY how Games Workshop got started.Perhaps that also explains, somewhat, WHY they go after any upstarts as aggressively as they do!
In an article published on Unplugged Games for the 40th anniversary of the company last February interviewed Games Workshop Co-Founder Ian Livingston, and the piece seemed to be quite eye opening.
It’s no secret that GW started out by importing and selling Dungeons and Dragons modules and other accessories, but some of these events from the early years had been lost to the history books.
The article follows the company’s progression from reselling RPG books to the rise of Warhammer in the mid to late 1980’s when some of us ‘old timers’ first started picking it up.
Form these excerpts, GW seems to make great business decisions during this time period, and changed their business model according to market demands and trends.
Citadel Miniatures was a design and production studio set up to manufacture metal figures for use in roleplaying games. Headed by designer Bryan Ansell, the new sister-company was intended as Games Workshop’s doorway into the miniatures market, which came with the potential for much higher profits than rulebook publishing.
then the next issue arose…
But Citadel wasn’t just supposed to sell miniatures; it was supposed to sell a lot of miniatures, and achieving that with a customer base made up largely of D&D players presented a problem.
For the most part, roleplay gamers bought one model at a time. They played single characters in long-running campaigns, and that meant they could go for years without needing to buy more miniatures.
and finally…
Ansell decided that a more lucrative approach would be to emulate the historical wargaming business, where customers bought entire armies at a time, ordering tens or even hundreds of figures and generating far greater profits.
To make that happen, Games Workshop would need to publish a new game – a radical departure from its previous offerings. Ansell turned to designers Richard Halliwell and Rick Priestley to produce a set of rules for full-scale battles that would appeal to die-hard fantasy roleplayers.
It was to be called Warhammer.
Citadel Miniatures: The Interview