Morrigan Press — различия между версиями
Строка 1: | Строка 1: | ||
− | '''Morrigan Press''' Inc. is a [[Role-playing game|pen and paper roleplaying game]] publisher headquartered in [[Moncton]], [[New Brunswick]], [[Canada]]. Starting out as the design studio behind the [[Jeremiah (series)]] RPG, Morrigan Press then went on to acquire the license to the [[Seventh Seal (roleplaying game)|Seventh Seal]] and [[Talislanta]] roleplaying games. They | + | '''Morrigan Press''' Inc. is a [[Role-playing game|pen and paper roleplaying game]] publisher headquartered in [[Moncton]], [[New Brunswick]], [[Canada]]. Starting out as the design studio behind the [[Jeremiah (series)]] RPG, Morrigan Press then went on to acquire the license to the [[Seventh Seal (roleplaying game)|Seventh Seal]] and [[Talislanta]] roleplaying games. They released their own [[Atlantis: The Second Age]] and [[Omni System]] games and in early 2006 acquired the rights to the [[Terran Trade Authority]] books. Shortly thereafter, the company stopped releasing new products. |
In a message posted on the Talislanta Yahoo Group, dated September 28, 2008, Scott Agnew, head of Morrigan Press, explained that the company began experiencing financial problems, "sometime in 2006." According to Mr. Agnew, the steady depreciation of the [[United States dollar]], coupled with declining demand for pen and paper roleplaying games, made it, "no longer economical for [Morrigan Press] to continue to sell RPGs." This prompted one of the major investors to pull out of the company, which brought it close to bankruptcy.<ref name="games.groups.yahoo.com">http://games.groups.yahoo.com/group/Talislanta/message/619</ref> | In a message posted on the Talislanta Yahoo Group, dated September 28, 2008, Scott Agnew, head of Morrigan Press, explained that the company began experiencing financial problems, "sometime in 2006." According to Mr. Agnew, the steady depreciation of the [[United States dollar]], coupled with declining demand for pen and paper roleplaying games, made it, "no longer economical for [Morrigan Press] to continue to sell RPGs." This prompted one of the major investors to pull out of the company, which brought it close to bankruptcy.<ref name="games.groups.yahoo.com">http://games.groups.yahoo.com/group/Talislanta/message/619</ref> | ||
Строка 5: | Строка 5: | ||
Morrigan Press has published no new products since 2006 and as of September, 2008, remains in debt. Scott Agnew expressed his desire to revive the company, but provided only a vague indication as to when this might happen--"within the next year or two," from his post on September 28, 2008.<ref name="games.groups.yahoo.com"/> | Morrigan Press has published no new products since 2006 and as of September, 2008, remains in debt. Scott Agnew expressed his desire to revive the company, but provided only a vague indication as to when this might happen--"within the next year or two," from his post on September 28, 2008.<ref name="games.groups.yahoo.com"/> | ||
− | As of | + | As of January 8, 2009, the Morrigan Press webpages remain unavailable. |
==References== | ==References== |
Версия 02:39, 9 января 2009
Morrigan Press Inc. is a pen and paper roleplaying game publisher headquartered in Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada. Starting out as the design studio behind the Jeremiah (series) RPG, Morrigan Press then went on to acquire the license to the Seventh Seal and Talislanta roleplaying games. They released their own Atlantis: The Second Age and Omni System games and in early 2006 acquired the rights to the Terran Trade Authority books. Shortly thereafter, the company stopped releasing new products.
In a message posted on the Talislanta Yahoo Group, dated September 28, 2008, Scott Agnew, head of Morrigan Press, explained that the company began experiencing financial problems, "sometime in 2006." According to Mr. Agnew, the steady depreciation of the United States dollar, coupled with declining demand for pen and paper roleplaying games, made it, "no longer economical for [Morrigan Press] to continue to sell RPGs." This prompted one of the major investors to pull out of the company, which brought it close to bankruptcy.[1]
Morrigan Press has published no new products since 2006 and as of September, 2008, remains in debt. Scott Agnew expressed his desire to revive the company, but provided only a vague indication as to when this might happen--"within the next year or two," from his post on September 28, 2008.[1]
As of January 8, 2009, the Morrigan Press webpages remain unavailable.
References
External links
- Morrigan Press Inc. not working
- Official Talislanta Site not working