RANDOM MUSINGS
on the
fin-de-millénaire games scene . . .
20 January 2000
. . .
In
recent days,
Fantasy Flight Games,
known for their empire-building wargames, e.g. Twilight Imperium,
have announced that they will do an English
version of
Reiner Knizia's
Durch die Wüste. Not that
this game truly needs an English version as it is already fully
internationalized. Considering that
Avalanche Press,
another
publisher of wargames (e.g. The Great War at Sea series),
has recently re-published Knizia's early efforts Digging
and Res Publica, it is possible to perceive a zeitgeist
of Knizia me-tooism. Hasbro, under their German Parker label,
recently brought out his Rheinländer.
Even the venerable
Avalon Hill
re-published his Grand National Derby as
Titan: the Arena before taking its last gasp and
GMT
will publish
Galaxy: the Arena,
based on the same system.
Knizia games have also been published by, in alphabetical order,
Abacus,
Alf,
Amigo,
ASS,
Blatz,
Dinter,
Editrice Giochi,
FAN,
Freizeit,
F.X. Schmid,
Gibson,
Goldsieber,
Hans im Glück,
Hexagames,
Hugendubel,
Jumbo,
Klee,
Kosmos,
Mayfair,
Milton Bradley (Hasbro),
Nelostuote,
999,
Pegaus,
Piatnik,
Pro Ligno,
Queen,
Ravensburger (and its labels Alea and Berliner Spielkarten),
Rio Grande,
Salagames,
Schmidt,
Spiel Spass,
Tilsit and
Winning Moves Deutschland.
It is possible that
some of these publishers such as Pegasus, Pro Ligno
and others that are not even known to gamers except for the Knizia
inventions that they have published. If he is not the inventor with
the largest number of diverse publishers, then certainly a
close second to whoever is.
. . .