Queen Games

Queen Games is a German publisher of tabletop games, based in Troisdorf and founded in 1992 by head Rajive Gupta, which specialises primarily in German-style, family-level games but has also published smaller numbers of both simpler, children's games and more complex, gamers' games.[1]

They have shown a propensity for re-releasing previously self-published games in professionally illustrated editions, having drawn multiple times from the catalogues of db-Spiele and, more recently, Winsome Games, and re-releasing those already published by themselves with a different theme and varying degrees of revision of the rules. One of their more popular releases is Alhambra, itself developed from a game originally self-published in 1992,[2] which won the Spiel des Jahres and placed second in the Deutscher Spiele Preis in 2003. Alhambra has since spawned many expansions and a number of standalone spin-offs and could be considered the "franchise" of the company. They are also known to some extent for publishing many games designed by Dirk Henn (and not only, though primarily, those previously self-published by him), with illustration by Jo Hartwig or Michael Menzel and/or with an Arabian theme, whether set within the Arabian Peninsula itself or an Islamic culture such as Al-Andalus. Other games published by Queen Games include Industria: 600 Years of Progress, San Francisco Cable Car and Wallenstein.

In 2000, Queen Games switched from publishing their games in traditionally horizontal, shallow, rectangularly faced boxes in various shapes and sizes to using distinctively "fatter" boxes designed for being stacked vertically in only four standardised box sizes[3] and their publications from about 2005 to 2010 have typically been produced in both a domestic version with only German rules and an export version (recognisable by the flags indicating the included languages on the front of the box)[4] with rules in English, French, Spanish, Italian, Dutch and German and the title on the box changed to be more language-independent (such as Alhambra instead of Der Palast von Alhambra). If the game components contain text this is replaced in the export version with either language-independent symbols (as has been the case with Alhambra and Roma) or a translation into English (as is the case with more recent releases such as Granada and Arena: Roma II). Some of their games have, however, also been re-published by publishers based in other countries in fully translated versions (these include, in the case of English-language versions, Überplay and Esdevium Games;[5][6] Queen's own export versions are, as of February 2010, distributed in the United States by Rio Grande Games and in the United Kingdom by Esdevium Games).[7] Both practices appear to be being gradually phased out as of February 2010, with most new games being packaged in shallower, square-fronted boxes and produced in one German-titled, multilingual edition; only those that are language-dependent have separate domestic and export editions.

Notable publications

Listed below are games published at some point by Queen Games that have been recommended by international awards or considered notable enough to be re-released by Queen or other publishers.

See also

References

  1. Ein Unternehmen stellt sich vor Queen Games, retrieved 8 February 2010^
  2. db-Spiele: Ordering Their Games retrieved 8 February 2010^
  3. Bernd Dietrich. The Queen small box games BoardGameGeek, 2 June 2006, retrieved 8 February 2010^
  4. An example.^
  5. Alhambra – Le Palais des dessins animés palais.wikidot.com, retrieved 22 June 2014^
  6. New Releases Week Commencing 12th October 2009 Esdevium Games, 12 October 2009, retrieved 8 February 2010^
  7. Queen Games – Connecting Generations – Startseite retrieved 22 June 2014^
  8. Wildlife Adventure Geekdō, retrieved 8 February 2010^
  9. Res publica – back of box of the Avalanche Press edition Geekdō, 16 November 2004, retrieved 17 February 2010^
  10. Nürnberg 2011: Pics of the Queen Games line-up | BoardGameGeek News | BoardGameGeek boardgamegeek.com, retrieved 22 June 2014^
  11. W. Eric Martin. Rosenberg's Bargain Hunter – On the Valley Games schedule Boardgame News, 15 June 2010, retrieved 15 June 2010^
  12. Z-MAN Board Games Z-Man Gamesn, retrieved 26 August 2010^
  13. Bruno Faidutti. Don Bruno Faidutti, retrieved 12 March 2010^
  14. Industria English language edition box cover back BoardGameGeek, 2005-08-22, retrieved 9 February 2010^
  15. 2004 International Gamers Awards Finalists and Recipients International Gamers Awards, 17 May 2005, retrieved 17 February 2010^
  16. W. Eric Martin. Gone Cardboard: Michael Schacht's Industria, Coming Again from Ystari Boardgame News, 27 January 2010, retrieved 9 February 2010^
  17. Carat – back of box Geekdō, 13 December 2005, retrieved 16 February 2010^
  18. Ausgezeichnete Spiele 2005 Spiel des Jahres, 2005, retrieved 9 February 2010^
  19. Michael Schacht. Contra/Architekton Games by Michael Schacht, retrieved 14 April 2010^
  20. Jenseits von Theben | Board Game | BoardGameGeek geekdo.com, retrieved 22 June 2014^
  21. BoardGameGeek | Gaming Unplugged Since 2000 geekdo.com, retrieved 22 June 2014^
  22. Sultan Geekdō, retrieved 12 March 2010^
  23. Preisträger Deutscher Spiele Preis, retrieved 1 October 2010^
  24. Ausgezeichnete Spiele 2010 Spiel des Jahres e.V., retrieved 15 June 2010^
  25. Queen Games - Connecting Generations^
  26. Gone Cardboard: New & Upcoming Games Boardgame News, retrieved 16 February 2010^
  27. Age of Scheme: Routes to Riches | Board Game | BoardGameGeek geekdo.com, retrieved 22 June 2014^
  28. W. Eric Martin. Convention Preview News: Nuremberg 2010 Update Boardgame News, 29 January 2010, retrieved 8 February 2010^
  29. Paris Connection at BoardGameGeek as of September 3, 2011^
  30. Bruno Faidutti. Dschunke Bruno Faidutti, retrieved 17 February 2010^
  31. Ausgezeichnete Spiele Queen Games, 2008, retrieved 8 February 2010^