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Mayfair Games was an American publisher of board, card, and roleplaying games that also licensed Euro-style board games to publish them in English. The company licensed worldwide English-language publishing rights to The Settlers of Catan series between 1996 [ 1 ] and 2016.
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As a veteran role-playing gamer, Bill Fawcett decided to get Mayfair Games into the RPG field, and the company began its Role Aids game line by publishing Beastmaker Mountain (1982). [ 1 ] : 166 Darwin Bromley was involved with the Chicago Wargaming Association and its CWAcon convention, where the first Role Aids fantasy adventures by Mayfair ...
Brian Walker, writing for Strategy Plus, praised the game for its accurate geography and use of the ECU. [5] In Issue #104 of Games, Sid Sackson said of Eurorails, "Although reaching [the end] will take the better part of an evening, the game is so engrossing that you probably won't even notice." [7] It was also featured in Games' 1992 Games ...
Appelcline noted that TSR soon reopened a legal dispute with Mayfair starting with their publication of City-State of the Invincible Overlord and that "Mayfair's publication of Demons had probably cranked up the importance of the case, since it went in the face of TSR's attempts to make their game more 'mother friendly'; as a result, Demons ...
Witches is a supplement which contains rules for a witch character class, and presents backgrounds and guidelines for nine playable subclasses: the classic archetypal witches of ancient times, faerie witches, the dianic witch from the medieval era, the Golden Dawn (19th century), Wiccan (modern era), voodoo, animistic, elemental, and the Deryni witches from Katherine Kurtz novels.
After the publication of Dwarves, the fourth Role Aids supplement, according to Shannon Appelcline, Mayfair Games "published additional AD&D Role Aids supplements quickly and in volume. The line featured many adventures as well as an increasing number of source books, including race- and class-related books like Dark Folk (1983), Wizards (1983 ...
Mayfair Games licensed the rights to the Mayfair Exponential Game System to another company, Pulsar Games, which later released the Blood of Heroes role-playing game without the license to use DC Comics' setting. New characters were created for the Blood of Heroes universe. The setting included with the game is a 1990s-style superhero world ...