Stag was eventually sold to the Magna Publishing Group in 1993, alongside its sister publication Swank .
: In this period, issues typically focused on explicit photo sets and adult film star features. For example, the November 1980 issue featured adult actress Desiree Cousteau, reflecting the magazine's focus at that time. Stag August 1980
: By 1978, the magazine shifted publishers and transitioned into a hardcore format with no literary content or fiction. Stag was eventually sold to the Magna Publishing
: While earlier decades featured iconic hand-painted covers by illustrators like George Mayers and Victor Prezio, by 1980, the aesthetic had shifted to photographic covers common to the adult magazine market of the era. : By 1978, the magazine shifted publishers and
During the 1980s, Stag magazine had completed a significant transition from its origins as a prominent "men's adventure" publication to a hardcore pornographic magazine. By August 1980, the magazine was published by Swank Publications, a successor to Martin Goodman's Magazine Management, and had largely abandoned the bold, action-driven fiction and "real-life" war stories that characterized its peak in the 1950s and 1960s. Historical Context and Content Evolution
: Originally launched in 1949, Stag was a staple of the "armpit slicks" or "sweats" genre, featuring sensationalized tales of survival, espionage, and exotic adventure.