Comics & Games Retailer was the longest-running periodical serving retailers who sell
comic books,
collectible card games, and
role-playing games until it ceased publication in 2007. Launched in April 1992 by
Krause Publications (later acquired by
F+W Publications Inc.), the free-to-retailers monthly magazine was a spinoff from that company’s consumer magazine,
Comics Buyer's Guide.
Early columnists included many retailers and experts on retailing, including Bruce Costa,
Brian Hibbs,
Scott Haring,
Preston Sweet,
Bob Gray, and
Harry Friedman. Hired in 1993, its editor of longest tenure,
John Jackson Miller, added “Market Beat,” a section of retailer sales reports; coverage of the game industry; and statistical analysis of comics and game sales.
Given its availability only to those working behind the scenes, the magazine’s opinion columns have often been the flashpoint of both controversy and new ideas for the hobby. In 1996, business researchers from the
University of Kentucky and
Rutgers University joined with the magazine to conduct a study of retailer attitudes toward distributors and publishers. In 2001, columnist
Joe Field suggested in the magazine that Diamond launch a
Free Comic Book Day – which later became an industry tradition. In 2002, columnist Brian Hibbs filed a class-action suit on behalf of retailers against
Marvel Comics over its trade terms. As a consequence he moved his "Titling at Windmills" column, first to...
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