Games Day is a yearly run gaming convention sponsored by Games Workshop. It was started in 1975, after another games convention scheduled for August that year cancelled. Games Workshop decided to fill the resulting gap by running a gaming day of their own. [1] [2] As a result, after some delays, the first Games Day was held at Seymour Hall, London on 20 December 1975. [3] The convention was important because there were few outlets for gamers to meet each other and play, and Games Workshop used this in their efforts to build the gaming scene in the U.K. [4] [5]
Following this successful start, and encouraged by mainstream media coverage, [6] [7] the second Games Day was held at a different venue, Chelsea Town Hall, London, on 12 February 1977. The event was somewhat delayed, owing to the logistics of running a rapidly expanding business. It followed rapidly by a separate "D&D Day" at Fulham Town Hall on 12 March, this being their core funding stream at that time.
Today the Games Day convention is held regularly in the United Kingdom at the National Exhibition Centre, Birmingham. It draws enthusiasts of Games Workshop's three main games (Warhammer 40,000, Warhammer, Lord of the Rings). Not just a commercial venture, gamers go to play their games and attend presentations by special guests from the Games Workshop's head office in Nottingham.
Alongside the gaming is a dealer's area which commonly includes products from Citadel Miniatures, particularly, armies for all the game systems scheduled for release. Another attraction is the Golden Demon, a painting competition of miniatures. There is also a competition of varying degrees of seriousness, the Scrap Demon competition, in which competitors create a models from plastic sprues.
It included the Golden Demon painting competition, news stands, sales stands, and tables to play on. In 2014 it was replaced by 'Warhammer Fest', similar but with additions such as demonstration pods and seminars.
Within the US, Games Days were held in Los Angeles, California; Baltimore, Maryland; Chicago, Illinois; and Atlanta, Georgia. In Canada, the venue was the Queen Elizabeth Building at Exhibition Place in Toronto, Ontario. In France the venue was Le Stade De France, Paris. In the Netherlands 2 Games days were organised under the Name "Mega Gaming Day", the first on 21 November 1998 in Amersfoort at De Flint theatre and the 2nd on 13 November 1999 in Utrecht at de Jaarbeurs.
Event | Date | Location | Approximate Attendance | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Games Day I | 20 December 1975 | Seymour Hall, Westminster, London | Reported as "Britain's largest gaming convention" in The Times, [6] but as "several hundred" in Owl and Weasel #12, compared with "circa 900" for South London Warlords annual wargaming convention in 1975 (same issue). | |
Games Day II | 12 February 1977 | Chelsea Town Hall, London | ||
"D&D Day" | 12 March 1977 | Fulham Town Hall, London | "est. 200" [8] | Separate event following Games Day II, but advertised within that programme. [9] |
Games Day III | 17 December 1977 | Seymour Hall, Westminster, London | "1,000+" [10] | |
Games Day IV | 28 October 1978 | Seymour Hall, Westminster, London | "over 2,000" to "circa 2,500" [11] | Stated in WD that would have ranked #2 (behind Origins) if had been held in the US. |
White Dwarf is a magazine published by British games manufacturer Games Workshop, which has long served as a promotions and advertising platform for Games Workshop and Citadel Miniatures products.
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Don Turnbull was a journalist, editor, games designer, and an accomplished piano and pinball player. He was particularly instrumental in introducing Dungeons & Dragons into the UK, both as the managing director of TSR UK Ltd and as the editor of the Fiend Folio.
John Peake is a traditional board game maker and one of the founders of Games Workshop.
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