Publishers
System
1 Step Software
21st Century Entertainment
8-Bit Guy
Access Software
Acclaim Entertainment
Acclaim Entertainment Inc
Accolade
Acorn Software Products Inc.
Activision
Advanced Gravis Computer Technology Ltd.
Adventure Soft (UK)
All Games (Shareware)
Alternative Software (Summit)
Apogee Software
Argus Specialist Publications (Your Commodore)
ASCII
Asciiware
Ascon
ATI
Attic Entertainment GmbH
Avalon Hill Game Company (Microcomputer Games)
Baen Software
Beau-Jolly
Bethesda Softworks
Black Legend
Blizzard Entertainment
Blue Byte
Blue Chip Software
BMG Interactive
Bomico Entertainment Software
Brøderbund Software
Bullfrog
Capstone
Cases Computer Simulations [CCS]
CDS Software
CDV Software GmbH
Cinemaware
Cineplay Interactive
Codemasters
Coktel Vision
Commodore Business Machines [CBM]
Core Design
Cosmi
CRL
Crucial Entertainment
Cyberdreams
Dansk System Industri
Datasoft
Dice Multi Media Europe B.V.
Digital Integration
Digital Integration (Action Sixteen)
Disk-Count Software
Domark
DreamFactory
Dynamix
Eidos Interactive
Eidos Interactive (Premier Collection)
EL-FI Software Production ApS
Electronic Arts
Electronic Distribution of Software [EDOS]
Electronic Zoo
Elite Systems
Empire Software
Epic MegaGames, Inc.
Epyx
ERBE Software
Ere Informatique / Ere International
Euro Power Pack (Platin)
Firebird
Flair Software
Flugung F. Jahnke / Ghost squadron
FormGen
FunSoft
Funsoft (Greenwood Entertainment Software)
Gametek
Golden Zone
Grandslam
Gremlin Graphics
GT Interactive Software
Home & Personal Computers. (H&P / Riska B.V. / Tasc)
HPS Simulations
I-Motion
id Software
Imagineering
Impressions
Infocom
Infogrames
International Computer Entertainment [ICE]
Internecine
Interplay Productions
Interstel Corporation
K.E. Media (PC Best Buy)
Keypunch Software (Box Office Software)
Konami
Krisalis Software / Chrysalis Software
Legend Entertainment Company
LimitedRunGames
Loriciels / Loriciel
LucasArts
Lucasfilm Games
Macrocom
Master Play Publishing Corporation
Mastertronic
Mastertronic Group (Sold Out Software)
Maxis Software
Mükra-Datentechnik
MegaTech Software
Melbourne House
Merit Software
Micro Gold
Micro Star
Micro-Partner (Magic Bytes)
Microdaft
MicroProse Software
MicroProse Software (MicroPlay)
MicroProse Software (MicroStyle)
MicroProse Software (PowerPlus)
Microsoft
Millennium
Mindcraft Software
Mindscape
Mindscape (Thunder Mountain)
Mirrorsoft
Mirrorsoft (Image Works)
Multi Media International
New Horizons Group
New World Computing
Ocean
Ocean (The Hit Squad)
Ocean / U.S. Gold
Optyk
Origin
Palace Software
Panther Games
Polarware
Poly.Play
Prism Leisure
Prism Leisure (Pc Hits)
Psygnosis
Psygnosis (Psyclapse)
QQP [Quantum Quality Productions]
Radarsoft
Rainbird
Rainbow Arts
Rainbow Arts (Golden Goblins)
RecycleMe1
reLine Software
Renegade Software
Romware GmbH
Scandinavian PC Systems ApS
Scandinavian Software ApS
Sierra (Game Arts)
Sierra (Originals)
Sierra On-Line / On-Line Systems
Silmarils
Silverrock Productions
Simulations Canada
Sir-Tech
Softgold
Softgold (Topshots)
Softgold (Topshots Deluxe)
Software 2000
Software 2000 (Classic Line)
Software Toolworks / Software Country
Spinnaker Software (Working Series)
Starbyte Software
Status Software
Stratagem
Strategic Simulations Inc [SSI]
Strategic Studies Group [SSG]
SubLOGIC
Sunflowers
Swiss Computer Arts
System 3 Software
Take-Two Interactive
Team 17
Telstar Fund & Games Ltd.
Thalion
THQ
Three-Sixty Pacific
Titus
Tynesoft
U.S. Gold
U.S. Gold (Kixx)
U.S. Gold (Kixx XL)
Ubisoft
Unknown
VCI Software
Virgin (Sold Out Software)
Virgin (The White Label)
Virgin Games
Virgin Interactive Entertainment
Virgin Mastertronic
Vision Intertainment
Walt Disney Company (Disney Software)
Warner Interactive Entertainment
Wesson International
Westwood Studios
Wizardware Group
Wizardware Group (WizardWorks)
Publisher Information and Releases
Avalon Hill became an early publisher of computer games in 1980 with its video game division Microcomputer Games, Inc., 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.

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.

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. In 1991, Hobbycraft Canada was sharing office space with Monarch Avalon.

AvalonCon World Boardgaming Championships was first held by AH in 1991.

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. In 1995, Monarch Avalon placed Avalon Hill up for sale but later withdrawn.

Hasbro subsidiary

Monarch sold Avalon Hill to Hasbro Games on August 4, 1998 for $6 million. 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. Hasbro Hill Games, Inc. was incorporated by Hasbro on March 2, 1998.

Avalon was transferred to the control of Wizards of the Coast, another Hasbro subsidiary, in 2004.

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. The games published under Hasbro ownership have been targeted for a wider general audience, and are less hobbyist-oriented.

Game rights

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).

Victory Games

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. As staff members gradually departed Victory Games for other companies, they were not replaced with new hires. The subsidiary was disbanded in 1989, though existing Victory Games designs were published under that imprint in subsequent years.


Main article: The General Magazine

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.

Heroes

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 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.

Location

Avalon Hill moved its corporate offices to 4517 Harford Road in Baltimore in the 1960s, while maintaining a second address on Read Street, where play-testing was conducted and inventory maintained.
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