Difference between revisions of "The General"

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[[The General]] (variously called "The Avalon Hill General", "Avalon Hill's General" or simply "The General") was first published in 1964, as a bi-monthly periodical devoted to supporting [[Avalon Hill|Avalon Hill's]] line of wargames, with articles on game tactics, history, and industry news.  Wargaming in the modern recreational sense was in its infancy, and The Avalon Hill Game Company had been producing wargames for a mass market for only five years.  The first issue was published on 1 May 1964; twelve pages in length with a six-issue (one year) subscription valued at $4.98 US dollars.
 
[[The General]] (variously called "The Avalon Hill General", "Avalon Hill's General" or simply "The General") was first published in 1964, as a bi-monthly periodical devoted to supporting [[Avalon Hill|Avalon Hill's]] line of wargames, with articles on game tactics, history, and industry news.  Wargaming in the modern recreational sense was in its infancy, and The Avalon Hill Game Company had been producing wargames for a mass market for only five years.  The first issue was published on 1 May 1964; twelve pages in length with a six-issue (one year) subscription valued at $4.98 US dollars.

Latest revision as of 20:05, 8 January 2008

The General.jpg

The General (variously called "The Avalon Hill General", "Avalon Hill's General" or simply "The General") was first published in 1964, as a bi-monthly periodical devoted to supporting Avalon Hill's line of wargames, with articles on game tactics, history, and industry news. Wargaming in the modern recreational sense was in its infancy, and The Avalon Hill Game Company had been producing wargames for a mass market for only five years. The first issue was published on 1 May 1964; twelve pages in length with a six-issue (one year) subscription valued at $4.98 US dollars.

The third issue featured a $0.25 discount coupon that could be used in any purchase direct by mail from Avalon Hill (with small print indicating a minimum of four coupons had to be redeemed at a time); these coupons would be a regular feature of the magazine.

Volume Two featured the addition of area editors based geographically around the United States; article submissions started to appear with such frequency that area editors were dropped after Volume 2 Issue 5.<ref>Information in this section condensed from the articles in The General Volume 25 Number 1 (1988)</ref>

Volume Three, Number One boasted an expansion to 16 page format. By the fourth year of publication, many fanzines and amateur publications began cropping up, and Avalon Hill promoted the sale of such, wisely suggesting that these amateur publications were good for the growth of the wargaming hobby. Volume Four also marked the change from dull paper stock to glossy paper.

In 1972, editorship passed from Thomas N. Shaw to a young Don Greenwood, who was just graduating from college. Volume 9 Number 1 would be his first issue, and he would remain at the helm until January 1982 when Rex A. Martin took over. (Volume 18 Number 5). In July 1992, the editorial duties were passed on to Don Hawthorne (Volume 28 Number 1).<ref>"The Avalon Hill Philosophy Part 145" (The General, Issue 28, Number 1)</ref>

By the 1980s the format had become remarkably stable; the cover would feature the boxtop art from one of Avalon Hill's games; The Avalon Hill Philosophy would contain industry news from the editor (though generally not mentioning games by other companies), a set of articles would contain variants for games, historical background to games, or game tactics/strategy discussions. The format by this time was 60 pages. A contest in each issue would focus on one particular game in the AH line, and the answer to a previous contest would appear. Each issue also had "So That's What You've Been Playing" showing statistics of mail in surveys included in each issue, where players rated the Avalon Hill (and later, Victory Games, the sister company to AH) titles they had been playing according to frequency. A Reader's Buyers Guide rated games on overall value, components, complexity, completeness, playability, availability, and game length (again, based the bi-monthly surveys). "The Infiltrator's Report" featured news on games in the Avalon Hill pipeline as well as industry news. The magazine would also contain full page advertisements for Avalon Hill Games (and for a brief period, a pull out section called "The Victory Games Insider" would feature news and information on Victory Games products). "The Question Box" would feature questions and answers previously received regarding rules of various Avalon Hill Games which would be published to clarify game playing procedures. Sports and Computer Games had their own sections, though the meat and potatoes of Avalon Hill's line were the board wargames. Certain flagship games would have semi-regular feature columns, such as Diplomacy's "The Compleat Diplomat" or Advanced Squad Leader's "ASL Clinic".

The General ceased publication in the wake of the Avalon Hill buyout by Hasbro in 1998. The last issue was Volume 32, Number 3.

Successors

Operations Magazine by Multi-Man Publishing considers itself a direct descendant; editor Bruce Monnin's first issue (No. 46, Fall 2004) carried the following message:

On the MMP website, when describing Operations, it states, "The content of the magazine will slowly evolve to include other MMP games and will eventually become to MMP what The General was to The Avalon Hill Game Company."<ref>Operations: The Wargaming Journal, Number 26, Fall 2004. (Multi-Man Publishing, Millersville, MD)</ref>

Multi-Man Publishing has the rights to several important former AH games, including Advanced Squad Leader and Up Front.

References

Template:Reflist

External links