Mongoose Publishing is a British manufacturer of role-playing games, miniatures, and card games, publishing material since 2001. Its licenses include products based on the science fiction properties Traveller, Judge Dredd, and Paranoia, as well as fantasy titles.
Mongoose Publishing was founded in Swindon, England , in 2001 by Matthew Sprange and Alex Fennell.[1][2] Sprange initially wanted to publish a miniatures game, but he ultimately went with the less expensive alternative of using Wizards of the Coast's d20 System license.[3]: 104 It grew out of the d20 System boom sparked by Dungeons & Dragons 3rd edition. The first release, the Slayer's Guides, concentrated on different monster types for the d20 system, while the subsequent Quintessential books, detailed specific character classes. The latter was to span three years and thirty-six different titles.[4]
In 2003 the company released the magazine Signs and Portents, a house organ aimed at supplementing and supporting Mongoose's products, as well as a range of generic standalone products based on the d20 System, collectively known as the "OGL series". Further acquisitions followed the same year, including the rights to a roleplaying game based on Conan the Barbarian (released in 2004), the roleplaying game Paranoia and a joint venture with d20 System portal EN World, the EN World Gamer quarterly magazine. Signs & Portents was turned into an online magazine after two years.[5] In 2007, Mongoose added the licenses for new editions of the classic RPGs RuneQuest and Traveller.
In 2008 Mongoose announced that it was ceasing production and marketing of its miniatures ranges and would, for the time being, concentrate solely on the production of RPGs and miniatures rules.
In September 2008, Matthew Sprange announced that Mongoose Publishing had "joined the Rebellion, becoming a sister company to Rebellion itself."[6]
In October 2008, Sprange announced that Mongoose Publishing would be publishing the new Lejendary Adventure line for Gygax Games.
In May 2011, Sprange announced that Mongoose Publishing and Issaries Inc. had parted ways, meaning that Mongoose would cease publication of RuneQuest, though they retain the copyrights to the revised RuneQuest II core rule system, which was re-released under the title Legend.
Games and products
Miniature Games
Noble Armada: A Call to Arms
Babylon 5: A Call to Arms
Judge Dredd: Gangs of Mega-City One
Starship Troopers: The Miniatures Game
Mighty Armies
Battlefield Evolution
Victory at Sea
A Call to Arms: Star Fleet (A partnership with Amarillo Design Bureau, based on the Star Fleet Universe)
Role-playing games and supplements
The Extraordinary Adventures of Baron Munchausen
Armageddon: 2089
Babylon 5 Roleplaying Game
Cities of Fantasy series
Skraag: City of Orcs
Stormhaven: City of a Thousand Seas
Highthrone: City of the Clouds
Stonebridge: City of Illusions
Classic Play series
Conan: The Roleplaying Game - translated into Spanish by the Spanish publishing house Edge Entertainment in 2005,[7] into French by UbIK in 2007,[8] and in Italian by Stratelibri/Wyrd Edizioni in 2006[9]
CthulhuTech
Elric of Melnibone
Encyclopedia Arcane series
Infernum
Jeremiah: The Roleplaying Game (based on the TV series)[10]: 110
The Judge Dredd Roleplaying Game
Lone Wolf: The Roleplaying Game and the Lone Wolf Multiplayer Game Book
Macho Women with Guns
Noctum
OGL Ancients
OGL CyberNet
OGL Horror
OGL Steampunk
OGL Wild West
Paranoia
Power Classes series
Quintessential series
RuneQuest
Sláine: The Roleplaying Game of Celtic Heroes (based on the comics)
↑STURROCK Ian, Conan, el juego de rol; edición atlántea, Edge Entertainment, Seville, February 2005, translated from English into Spanish by Antonio Rico, 352 p, 27x21 cm, hardcover, ISBN978-84-95830-47-0
↑Ian Sturrock, Paul Tucker, Harvey Barker and Vincent Darlage, Conan, le jeu de rôle ; édition atlante, UbIK, Toulouse (France), May 2007, translated from English into French by Guilhem Arbaret, Sandy Julien, Dominique Lacrouts, Geoffrey Picard and Jérôme Vessiere, hardcover, 352 p, ISBN978-84-95830-47-0