
There was also an excerpt of The Light Fantastic. Over the next few years, the magazine would carry loads of stuff about the game, and I collected it all. It commemorated the publication of Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay, a game I would play avidly for years to come. Issue 82: This issue marked the beginning of my real enjoyment of the magazine. Fun Fact: I had no idea that this article had been written by the great Joe Dever until starting to write this paragraph. Instead, I substituted my dad’s Napoleonic cavalry. I remember, I needed 60 Rohirrim models, of which I owned about three. Later I would convert it for third edition, and play the game with six friends over two days.

I was Tolkien-obsessed at the time, and I spent hours poring over this. Why? Joe Dever’s “Minas Tirith,” A Warhammer 1st edition scenario for playing the Battle of Pelennor Fields. Issue 53: This is comfortably, easily, by far and away the best issue of White Dwarf I ever owned. At the time, I think I’d played D&D, and owned Traveller. Whilst this was the first issue I bought, the earliest I ever tracked down was issue 40.

Issue 60: I must confess, I remember very little about this issue apart from the cover. To celebrate, and liberate the nostalgia running through my veins, here are few of what I consider to be the greatest White Dwarfs in history. The magazine will cost $9 (£6), and subscriptions are available. I have my preorder in already, as I’m going through something of re-ignition of my love affair with Games Workshop.

Columns include battle reports, army of the month, and the slightly worrying “Reader’s models.” The front cover promises rules and support for a whole host of GW products and looks to be harking back to the halcyon days of the magazine.
#Games workshop latest white dwarf magazine free#
Once again the numbers are to be reset, so for the third time in 39 years, gamers can pick up White Dwarf issue 1.īranded as “The Ultimate Warhammer Magazine, ” this debut issue come with a free miniature (a Slaughterpriest) and comes in at a whopping 156 pages. Now, however, White Dwarf is to return to a monthly release schedule. In recent years, it’s been a weekly periodical, and one I’ve had zero interest in. First released in 1977, it’s been the lifeblood Games Workshop-related news for nearly 40 years. This Friday (September 2nd) will see the relaunch of White Dwarf magazine.
