Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Alternative Armies - Scottish company; Archive Miniatures & Game Systems - Early producer of miniatures for role-playing games [1] Asgard Miniatures - Early British company based in Nottingham [2] Chronicle Figures - Early British company that produced role-playing game miniatures [3] Black Powder Red Earth - Produces Modern war game miniatures ...
Flight Miniatures (USA) Shopping Zone Plus (Canada) [7] GeminiJets (USA) Herpa Wings (Germany) Hobby Master (China) Hogan Wings (Hong Kong SAR) IDT Jets (USA) Inflight200; JC Wings (Hong Kong SAR) Konishi Model (Japan) Legacy Jets LLC (USA) Long Prosper (China) Lupa Aircraft Models (Netherlands) Matchbox (UK) Mastercraft Collection; PacMin ...
This page was last edited on 16 February 2024, at 23:01 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
RAFM Company, Inc. of Brantford, Ontario is a producer of miniatures, reference materials, and board games. RAFM has produced games, reference materials, and their own lines of miniature figures in 15 mm, 20 mm, 25 mm, and 28 mm scales since 1977. Their games concern soldiers, adventurers and monsters inspired by both history and fiction.
Rubicon Group Holding, is a global entertainment production company.RGH has a team of several hundreds of employees in four locations Amman, Jordan, Los Angeles, United States, Manila, Philippines and Dubai, United Arab Emirates designing, directing and producing content including: Feature Films, Television, Games, Applications, Webisode Content, Themed Entertainment Design and Development, IP ...
A.C. Gilbert Company – American manufacturer of 1:32 scale slot cars and sets, 1930s–1960s, though mostly made erector sets. Academy Plastic Model – Korean plastic model maker, mostly military vehicles. Associated with dinky; Accurate Miniatures – Molded kits made for this company by Monogram. 1:24 scale. ACME – Hong Kong maker of ...
Hundreds of thousands of anti-war protesters jammed the streets in April 1971 in Washington, D.C., and as the demonstration against U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War heightened, more than 7,000 ...
In 1994, Siku Toys purchased the Gama Toys after its company closure and absorbed it into Siku Toys. [3] According to an archive of the official Siku website in 1998 (December 6, 1998 on archive.com), it is highly likely that production at that time took place at "Industriestr. 1-3, 12099 Berlin-Tempelhof-Schöneberg".