The Duelist

This article is about the magazine. For the South Korean film, see Duelist (film).
The Duelist

The cover of issue 20 of The Duelist
Categories Trading card games
Frequency Monthly
First issue Fall 1993
Final issue
— Number
September 1999
41
Company Wizards of the Coast
Country United States
Based in Renton, Washington
Language English
ISSN 1082-8621

The Duelist (or simply Duelist as it was renamed) was created in Fall 1993 as a quarterly magazine produced by Wizards of the Coast[1] to accompany the increasingly popular Magic: The Gathering trading card game. It later became a monthly gaming magazine with simply a focus on the collectible card game and trading card game industry before publication ceased in September 1999. The magazine was based in Renton, Washington.[2]

What initially separated The Duelist from other card magazines of its time, such as InQuest or Scrye, was its detailed pages. Each issue featured a key artist who created a unique cover (often based on an existing Magic card) and whose art was showcased inside the issue; however in later issues, these art features were discontinued.

In addition to its artwork, the magazine also included articles on various strategies, game design articles, fiction from Magic storylines, product checklists, rules questions, Magic tournament coverage; even Magic puzzles were eventually introduced. Pricelists would be included as well. Phil Foglio and his wife Kaja resurrected Phil's former Dragon strip "What's New?", which ran for almost the entire life of The Duelist, and a deck-construction column called Excuse Me, Mr. Suitcase? ("Mr. Suitcase" being a reference to the large collections of cards that some players would carry with them) was among the other regular features. Magic: The Gathering creator Richard Garfield often wrote the quizzical back column of the magazine.

The Duelist was known to occasionally give out promotional cards from upcoming Magic: The Gathering releases. In addition to Magic, it also served as a way for Wizards to introduce players to other products it owned, including the moderately obscure Vampire: The Eternal Struggle and the more popular Legend of the Five Rings.

As Magic grew, a companion newsletter (The Duelist Companion) was sent out to The Duelist subscribers in between magazine releases; eventually this was dropped in favor of bimonthly magazine circulation, and still later a monthly magazine. Other card games were profiled, such as Star Trek, Star Wars, and the Pokémon Trading Card Game. Magic gradually lost the magazine's focus as it put more emphasis on up-and-coming card games; with Pokémon's immediate North American success, The Duelist was converted into a dual-format publication, with general separate sections for Magic and Pokémon. By this time, it had already expanded to covering video games and others.

The Duelist ran for 41 issues. The magazine was replaced with Topdeck, which was more focused on Pokémon and had relatively little to do with Magic, trying to capitalize on a younger age group. Topdeck was canceled after 15 issues, partially due to cutting costs as a result of Hasbro's purchase of Wizards of the Coast, but also due to competition from Internet resources. Wizards was already publishing The Sideboard, which was dedicated solely to Magic tournament play that eventually was reborn as an online publication, and in The Duelist's wake, some of the content from the magazine merged with The Sideboard to create magicthegathering.com.

See also

References

  1. "The Duelist Inserts". Magic Rarities. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  2. Titus Chalk (December 6, 2013). So Do You Wear a Cape?: The unofficial story of Magic: The Gathering. epubli GmbH. p. 4. ISBN 978-3-8442-6814-0. Retrieved December 12, 2015.

External links

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