Company type | Privately held corporation |
---|---|
Industry | Gaming |
Predecessor | IceHouse Games, Inc. |
Founded | July 24, 1996 in College Park, Maryland [1] |
Founders | Andrew Looney Kristin Looney [1] |
Headquarters | The Sterling Building [2] , , United States |
Key people |
|
Products | card games, Icehouse sets |
Brands |
|
Revenue | $1 million (2012 [1] ) |
Owners | Andrew Looney Kristin Looney |
Number of employees | 7 (2012 [1] ) |
Website | looneylabs |
Looney Labs, Inc. is a small game company based in College Park, Maryland, United States. It is named after its founders, Andrew Looney and Kristin Looney, and is best known for creating the Fluxx line of card games. The company has three U.S. patents and eight Origins Awards. [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]
The company's games are distributed by ACD Distribution, Alliance Game Distributors and GTS for the US hobby game market, Lion Rampant for Canada and Publisher Services, Inc. for U.S. mass market and book trade and the international market. [8] [9]
Andrew and Kristin Looney previously entered game design and manufacturing with Icehouse Games which was started to manufacture pieces for the formerly fictional IceHouse game in 1989. In 1996, Looney shut down Icehouse Games, Inc. as the cost to create Icehouse pyramid molds would cost $12,000 and to focus on designing a card game. [1]
Andrew Looney soon designed the Fluxx card game. Looney Laboratories was launched in 1996 as a part-time home based design company [10] soon adding a nearby storage unit as a warehouse. [11] Fluxx was licensed out to Iron Crown Enterprises to publish. [12] At the 1998 Origins International Game Expo and Fair in Columbus, Ohio, Looney launched its Aquarius card game. [10] Proton and Q-Turn were design in 1998–1999. [11] Alison Frane started working at Looney Labs with Fluxx using her artistic abilities. The company's November 1999 weekly web zine officially launched its Mad Lab Rabbit fan demo program. [3]
Iron Crown went into bankruptcy thus the Looney triggered the license provision allowing the rights to revert to the company. Lab then decided to publish Fluxx in house instead of finding another publisher. Kristin Looney by 2000 quit her job to work full-time. [12] By 2000, the company re-released Icehouse as Icehouse: The Martian Chess Set , [13] released Chrononauts [3] and a new printing of Fluxx (version 2.1). [11] Icehouse sold poorly in stores while selling briskly on the company's website. [3]
In summer 2001, ACMS, later renamed Print Mail Communications (PMC), took over from the storage unit as warehousing and distribution company. [11] In 2001, IceHouse and Chrononauts both won Origins Awards 2000 [13] while Looney Labs published Cosmic Coasters, Fluxx Blanxx, and Chrononauts: Lost Identities. [11] Icehouse pieces were released as monochrome stash tubes in 2001. [14]
Andrew Looney became full-time by 2002. [12] Labs released in 2002 Nanofictionary, Are You a Werewolf? and a new Fluxx primary version. [11] In 2003, the company expanded the Fluxx line with its first themed variant and a licensed German language version. [11]
Looney Labs found in 2004 that an unaware Covenant Communications had published a rip-off of their game, Aquarius, as Search, Ponder, and Play! in 2003, for which Labs reached a licensing deal with Covenant. [15] In 2004, the Zendo icehouse set won Best Abstract Board Game of 2003. [16] while in 2005 the set won the Mensa Select Game Award. [17]
Company offices moved to Janet's Attic, an attic apartment in their friends' house several blocks away in early 2005. [11] By October 2005, EcoFluxx was in play testing while Just Desserts was in prototype, or beta stage. [3]
Robin Vinopal joined the company in early 2006 becoming Chief Operating Officer, Treasurer, and member of the Board of Directors. [11] In 2006, Lab revamped their Icehouse sets to the Treehouse main set [18] plus two color schemes and also released Martian Coasters. [11] With the 2007 publishing of Zombie Fluxx the first new type of card, Creeper, is introduced. [11] Also in 2007, the Mad Rabbits fan/demo program was shut down. [19]
With Frane's purchase of a house, Pepperland, in 2008, the company moved into its basement apartment. Product wise that year, Labs released edition 4 Fluxx and [11] worked with Toy Vault to release Monty Python Fluxx. [20] The company began using a standard two-part box instead of to-fit tuck box for a consistent look and shelving ease. [11]
In 2009, Looney Labs published one new card game, Are You the Traitor?, another Fluxx variant, new editions of its two other card games and a few expansion sets while starting to use a postcard promo card for marketing. [11] The company on July 1, 2009 started distributing through Publisher Services, Inc. for international accounts, and to the book trade. [21] On November 13, 2009, Labs launched its Full Baked Ideas imprint with a new edition of Stoner Fluxx and expectations for a drinking variant of Fluxx. [22]
The Back to the Future: The Card Game was released in 2010 along with two Fluxx re-releases in the new box format. Two new Fluxx variants debuted in 2011 that saw the IceHouse pyramids re-released with a new lead game set, IceDice. [11] The company's fan/demo club was restarted in 2011. [19]
The company on January 5, 2012 reduced the number of distribution companies that they ship through to ACD Distribution and Alliance Game Distributors for the US hobby game market, Lion Rampant for Canada and Publisher Services, Inc. for U.S. mass market and book trade and the international market. ACD and Alliance would also make their supporting material available via subscription. [8]
On August 1, 2012, Looney Labs got a simplified less expensive general market version with redesigned packaging of Fluxx into Target stores. [1] On February 7, 2013, Labs released the 2.0 edition of Nanofictionary as a print on demand product. [23]
In August 2013, the company moved from Pepperland basement to the top floor of The Sterling Building, an actual office complex. [2] In May 2015, Labs changed its fulfillment company from PMC to Excel. [24] Lab added in mid-2015 GTS as another distributor. [9]
Loonacy was released in March 2014 [8] [25] and won the Parents' Choice FunStuff Award Spring 2014 Games. [26] While two other Loonacy versions were released in the next two following years. [27] [28]
In 2017, Looney Labs had multiple releases with three Fully Baked Ideas summer releases of variants of existing games, a revived Nanofictionary version, a few variants of Fluxx including Chemistry Fluxx [29] and Zendo . In December 2017, the company reissued Zendo game separate from the Looney pyramids line for the first time. [30]
Graphic artist Mary Engelbreit was signed to a licensing deal in February 2018 with Looney Labs' for versions of Fluxx and Loonacy games to be released in the third quarter 2018. Two second quarter games were also scheduled, a new Fluxx set and Get the MacGuffin card game. [31]
Fully Baked Ideas is Looney Labs's mature publishing imprint.
Icehouse pieces, or Icehouse Pyramids, Treehouse pieces, Treehouse Pyramids and officially Looney Pyramids, are nestable and stackable pyramid-shaped gaming pieces and a game system. The game system was invented by Andrew Looney and John Cooper in 1987, originally for use in the game of Icehouse.
Andrew J. Looney is a game designer and computer programmer. He is also a photographer, a cartoonist, a video-blogger, and a marijuana-legalization advocate.
Origins Game Fair is an annual gaming convention that was first held in 1975. Since 1996, it has been held in Columbus, Ohio at the Greater Columbus Convention Center. Origins is run by the Game Manufacturers Association (GAMA). Origins was chartered to serve gaming in general, including wargaming and miniatures gaming.
Zendo is a game of inductive logic designed by Kory Heath in which one player creates a rule for structures ("koans") to follow, and the other players try to discover it by building and studying various koans which follow or break the rule. The first student to correctly state the rule wins.
Martian Chess is an abstract strategy game for two or four players invented by Andrew Looney in 1999. It is played with Icehouse pyramids on a chessboard. To play with a number of players other than two or four, a non-Euclidean surface can be tiled to produce a board of the required size, allowing up to six players.
Fluxx is a card game, played with a specially designed deck published by Looney Labs. It is different from most other card games, in that the rules and the conditions for winning are altered throughout the game, via cards played by the players.
Chrononauts is a family of card games that simulates popular fictional ideas about how time travellers might alter history, drawing on sources like Back to the Future and the short stories collection Travels Through Time. The game was designed by Andrew Looney and is published by Looney Labs. The original game and a variant each won the Origins Award for Best Traditional Card Game.
Aquarius is a card game created by Andrew Looney and published by Looney Labs. The game play has some similarity to the game of dominoes. The card design and feel of the game is influenced by the Hippie movement and the art of Peter Max. The game has been released in two editions. The First Edition deck contained 5 Goal cards, 15 Action cards and 40 Element cards. The current Second Edition deck has 5 Goal cards, 18 Action cards, 55 Element cards and 1 "Wild" card.
Brawl is a real-time card game designed by James Ernest and released in 1999 by Cheapass Games.
History of the World is a board game designed by Ragnar Brothers and originally published in 1991. It is played by up to six players across various epochs, each player playing a different empire every round to have the greatest score at the end of the game by conquering other players' regions of the board.
This page lists board and card games, wargames, miniatures games, and tabletop role-playing games published in 1996. For video games, see 1996 in video gaming.
Treehouse is a game in which players try to get their configuration of Icehouse pieces to match the central configuration, shared by all players. The rolling of the special "Treehouse Die" tells the player what kind of move to make to change his own or the central configuration, and then he does so to best move towards the goal.
Evil Hat Productions is a company that produces role-playing games and other tabletop games. They are best known for the free indie RPG system Fate, Blades in the Dark, and Thirsty Sword Lesbians, all of which have won multiple awards.
Zombie Fluxx is a 2007 card game published by Looney Labs.
Pandemic is a cooperative board game designed by Matt Leacock and first published by Z-Man Games in the United States in 2008. Pandemic is based on the premise that four diseases have broken out in the world, each threatening to wipe out a region. The game accommodates two to four players, each playing one of seven possible roles: dispatcher, medic, scientist, researcher, operations expert, contingency planner, or quarantine specialist. Through the combined effort of all the players, the goal is to discover all four cures before any of several game-losing conditions are reached.
Rick Loomis was an American game designer, most notable as the founder of game publisher Flying Buffalo, which he managed until his death.
Mantic Games is a British miniatures and board game publisher, based in Bulwell, Nottingham, UK.
Icehouse: The Martian Chess Set is a 1999 board game published by Looney Labs.
Evolution is a 2014 board game where 2-6 players build a highly competitive ecosystem of omnivores, carnivores and scavengers. Players adapt their existing species and evolve new ones in response both to the abundance or scarcity of food, but also the behaviour of other species in the ecosystem. The scoring system rewards players whose species have high populations, consume the most food and are the most diverse. It was designed by Dominic Crapuchettes of North Star Games, working with Dmitry Knorre and Sergei Machin, who had previously released a similar game in Russia.
Oz Fluxx is a 2012 card game published by Looney Labs.