Mayfair Games Closing After 36 Years

Started by BanzaiCat, February 09, 2018, 01:07:09 PM

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BanzaiCat

But apparently, Asmodee is taking their assets over.

From their Facebook page, less than an hour ago:

QuoteAs of today, the management team at Mayfair Games, Inc. announces we will wind down game publishing. After 36 years, this was not an easy decision or one we took lightly, but it was necessary. Once we had come to this conclusion, we knew we had to find a good home for our games which is when we reached out to Asmodee.

We are pleased to announce that we have sold our games to Asmodee North America, who have acquired all the assets of Mayfair Games, Inc. This acquisition includes the product line for both Mayfair Games, Inc and Lookout Games, GmbH.

We would like to take a moment to say - Thank You! Thank you to the many retailers, reviewers, customers, industry partners, and volunteers, who made us a success over the past 36 years! You helped bring our games to game stores and cafes, conventions, libraries, schools, kitchen tables, backyard patios, family vacations, and more... where thousands of fans have been introduced to this great world of board gaming. Thank you!!


Nefaro

Hrmm.. not sure if I have any of their games. 

Also:  Asmodee is slowly taking over the boardgame world.  The EA or Disney of boardgaming?   ???

Bison

Euros, like Caverna, and 18XX games are or were the Mayfair staple.

airboy

Mayfair originally was based on Train centered board games.  Those have a strong following.  They have big contests at large conventions usually called "Puffing Billy" events.  I met the owner back in the very early days in the late 1980s and that was his love and the focus of the company.

They evolved over time and have a much broader catalogue of other games.  But I think their big sellers were always the train focused ones.

bayonetbrant

I remember a whole bunch of their mid-80s sci-fi board games, the The Company War
https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/3376/company-war

The key to surviving this site is to not say something which ends up as someone's tag line - Steelgrave

"their citizens (all of them counted as such) glorified their mythology of 'rights'...and lost track of their duties. No nation, so constituted, can endure." Robert Heinlein, Starship Troopers

BanzaiCat

I recall meeting the owner at an Origins or GenCon in the mid-2000s. Nice people all around. Not really a lot of games I liked but they did do some interesting things.

Silent Disapproval Robot

I remember they bought the rights to the Chill RPG after Pacesetter went out of business.  I really liked Chill back in the day.  I had the Pacesetter stuff and my friend bought the Mayfair version.  I hated the artwork and the few Mayfair-published adventures that we played all kinda sucked.  The Pacesetter version was heavily influenced by Hammer horror films and the pulp fiction style stuff of the 1930s and 1940s.  The Mayfair version seemed to be influenced by the splatter horror films of the 80s like Hellraiser. 

I think the only Mayfair game I own now is "Oh My Goods" which is a fun little engine builder style card game.

A gaming buddy has the Mayfair version of A House Divided and we break that out and play a few times a year.


bayonetbrant

Fun read from Matt Forbeck over on FB

QuoteWith the impending closing of Mayfair Games, one of my favorite companies in the gaming industry, it's time to tell this story. Back in the day, I nearly blew the deal that rescued Mayfair Games from bankruptcy. Or so I was told. Here's how the tale goes, to the best of my recollection.

This was in 1997, and Mayfair Games was on the rocks, despite having picked up the rights to Settlers of Catan the year before. The company was losing money, and the Bromleys (who founded the company and still owned it then) were about to shut it down. I was doing the occasional freelance article for InQuest Gamer and Wizard Magazine back then, and InQuest asked me to interview my pal Lou Rexing of Mayfair about the company's troubles.

At the time, Lou was the company's director of sales and one of the few people still left in the company. When I called him to chat, he was sitting on the floor because they'd already hauled away the chairs, and as you might imagine, he wasn't too pleased about the situation. In the course of our chat, Lou dropped a number of memorable quotes about things had gotten to that point. The one that still sticks with me—and which became the source of the trouble—was something like: "I could have taped a twenty-dollar bill to every game we shipped and saved money over what we spent on marketing."
(Someone might be able to dig up the article for a more exact quote. I may have a copy here somewhere, but I'm not going to lose the flow to go hunting.)

Anyhow, the article came out in the issue of the magazine that was published during that year's GAMA Trade Show, and the consortium of people who were hoping to buy Mayfair at the time—Pete Fenlon, Coleman Charlton, Will Niebling, and so on—got upset about it when they read it. It seems that Lou had let his guard down with me a bit more than he should have—which I can't really blame him for, as we were great pals at the time.

Looking back, I probably should have called Lou to confirm his quotes with him. My editor at InQuest had read it all through and even asked me, "Did he really say that?" Yeah, it was all accurate—and delicious—but maybe not the right thing to print.

To make sure the article didn't destroy the deal—which meant that Lou would keep his job with Mayfair for a while longer—the buyers ran around the convention, literally snatching up every copy of the magazine they could find before Darwin Bromley, then president of Mayfair, could read it. Apparently they managed to succeed. From what I was told, Darwin never read the article, and the sale proceeded unimpeded.

Mayfair went through a number of other changes over the years, but I rooted them on every step of the way. I'm sorry to see the company finally close its doors—and I'm grateful that it survived another twenty years after that incident!
The key to surviving this site is to not say something which ends up as someone's tag line - Steelgrave

"their citizens (all of them counted as such) glorified their mythology of 'rights'...and lost track of their duties. No nation, so constituted, can endure." Robert Heinlein, Starship Troopers