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Black Dog Game Factory

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Black Dog Game Factory was a publishing label founded in 1995 by White Wolf, Inc. for the publication of a number of adult-themed books in their original World of Darkness RPG line. Although several products were critically acclaimed, the audience was limited, and Black Dog ceased publication in 2002.

Publication history

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White Wolf Publishing published Vampire: The Masquerade in 1991, the first in a series of horror role-playing games titled World of Darkness. In 1994, Dirt Merchant Games published the satirical RPG HoL that used several adult themes like sex and drugs. White Wolf Publishing was interested in republishing HoL, but they were concerned it might damage the company's reputation as a publisher of entertainment intended for young adults. For that reason, White Wolf created the Black Dog Game Factory imprint, lifting the name from a company mentioned in Werewolf: The Apocalypse (1991).[1]: 25 

White Wolf also used the Black Dog imprint to release more adult-themed supplements for Vampire,[2] Werewolf, Mage, and Wraith in 1995. After that initial flurry of activity, output from Black Dog decreased to an average of two books a year. As game historian Shannon Appelcline noted in 2014's Designers & Dragons, "In many ways, these Black Dog books represented a return to form for White Wolf. They offered up new ways to present innovative material, just as Vampire had been cutting edge back when it appeared on the gaming scene in 1991. Some of that innovation was noticed. Charnel Houses of Europe: The Shoah (1997) — which adapted the Holocaust for Wraith — and the four-volume, award-winning Giovanni Chronicles (1995–1999) — which traced a family from the 1400s to the modern day — both earned attention and acclaim for White Wolf."[1]: 25 

The constant friction between pushing the envelope and damaging White Wolf's reputation eventually led to the end of Black Dog. Appelcline explained that "Despite that critical acclaim, Black Dog's smaller audience and the chance that it could still damage the reputation of White Wolf with its more intense and grittier subject matter eventually spelled the end for the imprint. Like Streetfighter, Black Dog was another attempt to break new ground in the late '90s that ultimately went nowhere."[1]: 25  The last publication produced under the Black Dog name was in 2002.

Description

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Books published by Black Dog had adult or mature themes, though not all Black Dog-published books dealt with sexual material. Some are labeled as adult because they deal with themes of strong violence or evil (such as Hunter Book: Wayward), religious themes (Cainite Heresy), or controversial subject matter (the Holocaust-based Charnel Houses of Europe: The Shoah).

Books published by Black Dog include:

Name Game Line Release Date
The Giovanni Chronicles, a four-part series
Part I
Part II
Part III
Part IV
Vampire: The Masquerade

?
April 1, 1996[3]
March 12, 1998[4]
April 291 1999[5]

Montreal by Night Vampire: The Masquerade November 1, 1996[6]
Clanbook: Baali Vampire: The Dark Ages June 1, 1998[7]
The Cainite Heresy Vampire: The Dark Ages February 24, 1999[8]
Freak Legion: A Player's Guide to Fomori Werewolf: The Apocalypse December 1, 1995[9]
Destiny's Price Mage: The Ascension December 1, 1995[10]
Charnel Houses of Europe: The Shoah Wraith: The Oblivion February 1, 1997[11]
Dark Reflections: Spectres Wraith: The Oblivion December 1, 1995[12]
Dead Magic Mage: The Ascension July 2000[13]
HoL: Human Occupied Landfill Hol (role-playing game) 1995 (re-release)
Hunter Book: Wayward Hunter: The Reckoning January 28, 2002[14]

The imprint also published Eternal Hearts, an erotic novel set in the universe of Vampire: The Masquerade. A book for Aberrant, titled Cults of Personality, was planned for release, but the game line was cancelled before the book made it to print.

References

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  1. ^ a b c Shannon Appelcline (2014). Designers & Dragons: The '90s. Evil Hat Productions. ISBN 978-1-61317-084-7.
  2. ^ Oscar (2021-02-08). "'Black Dog Game Factory' was the Edgy Cool Kid of RPGs". The Ugly Monster. Retrieved 2022-12-10.
  3. ^ See Amazon Homepage
  4. ^ See Amazon Homepage
  5. ^ See Amazon Homepage
  6. ^ See Amazon Homepage
  7. ^ See Amazon Homepage
  8. ^ See Amazon Homepage
  9. ^ See Amazon Homepage
  10. ^ See Amazon Homepage
  11. ^ See Amazon Homepage
  12. ^ See Amazon Homepage
  13. ^ See Amazon Homepage
  14. ^ See Amazon Homepage