Wargames Factory
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| Company type | Limited liability company (LLC) |
|---|---|
| Industry | Miniature wargaming manufacturer |
| Founded | 2007 |
| Headquarters | 7224 North 63rd Street, Longmont, Colorado , United States |
Key people | George Sivy |
Wargames Factory was an American plastic miniature manufacturer that opened in 2007. It specialized in highly detailed, multi-part models in hard plastic for wargaming. Wargames Factory produced models mostly in the 28 millimetres (1.1 in) range, but did other scales as well. It was unique in the way it chose the subject of its miniatures, using what it called the Liberty and Union League to produce models submitted by consumers.
The company used a "direct to digital" approach which did not use an original physical sculpt. This was unlike many other plastic wargames figure manufacturers who sculpted the figure at three times the eventual size (called three-ups), then digitally scanned and reduced them for production. In the design process the company used the software Freeform from Sensible (which in 2012 was bought by Geomagic). [1][2][3]
History
Wargames Factory was established as a Limited Liability Company in 2007, managed by Anthony Reidy. The company entered partnership with the plastic injection molding company Ghost Studio.[4] In 2010 the company was taken over by its partner with George Sivy as new manager.[5][6][7] The Massachusetts-based LLC was dissolved on April 19, 2011[8] as the business moved to Colorado.[9]
2012 saw the company taking on manufacturing projects for several miniature wargaming companies. They produce models for InMediaRes Productions' imprint Catalyst Game Labs boardgame Leviathan's, first released on GenCon in 2011.[10][11] They also produce lines of miniatures for DreamForge-Games[12][13] and Scarab Miniatures.[14][15] In January 2016 Warlord Games announced that they had "entered into partnership with Wargames Factory to exclusively distribute their plastic wargames kits worldwide."[16]
Liberty and Union League
The name Liberty and Union League was taken from the protests of the early American colonists and the raising of liberty poles.
Ideas are submitted by customers and then wait for approval by the Wargames Factory staff. Once the idea is approved as being viable it is listed on the Liberty and Union League, and on the Wargames Factory message boards on the company's website.
After its listing, people are then able to pre-order sprues of that idea for a miniature. The pre-orders are to gauge the interest in a sprue idea, and once they reach a thousand the models are put into production.