Philip Reed (game designer)

Philip J. Reed
OccupationGame designer

Philip J. Reed is a role-playing game game designer and is best known for his work with Steve Jackson Games where he held the position of CEO.

Career

Philip J. Reed has worked in the RPG industry since 1995 for West End Games, Privateer Press, Atlas Games, and Steve Jackson Games.[1]

Independent projects

Reed began an independent blog in 2002, posting reviews or short articles about games.[2]: 374  In September 2002, Reed released the PDF 101 Spellbooks (2002) for the d20 system.[2]: 374  Reed sold his first PDFs from his website under the Spider Bite Games imprint.[2]: 374  In 2006, Reed released the ePublishing 101 PDF series.[2]: 374 

Work and collaborations

In 2003, Reed and artist Christopher Shy created Ronin Arts.[2]: 374 

The company 54°40' Orphyte sold the rights to Pacesetter Ltd's game Star Ace to Reed, for which he created a website in 2003 publish a d20 version of it, but the website lasted only a year.[2]: 199 

In 2004, Reed left Steve Jackson Games to work on Ronin Arts full-time.[2]: 374  Michael Hammes and Reed wrote 4c System (2007) as a retro-clone to the Marvel Super Heroes role-playing game system from TSR.[2]: 374 

CEO of Steve Jackson Games

In 2007, Reed went back to work at Steve Jackson Games, becoming its COO in 2008.[2]: 374  He became the CEO of Steve Jackson Games in 2014.[3] Reed joined Kickstarter's inaugural Community Advisory Council in 2002, a group formed to provide creative insight and help the platform identify issues, opportunities, and questions it might otherwise miss.[4]

In 2023, Reed stepped back from his role as CEO of Steve Jackson Games after a long tenure, reducing his time commitment to focus on health and personal projects, but remained involved with the company as Art Director, continued to lead crowdfunding efforts, and served on the Senior Staff and Board of Directors.[3]

References

  1. ^ Reed, Philip J. (2007). "BattleTech". In Lowder, James (ed.). Hobby Games: The 100 Best. Green Ronin Publishing. pp. 24–27. ISBN 978-1-932442-96-0.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Shannon Appelcline (2011). Designers & Dragons. Mongoose Publishing. ISBN 978-1-907702-58-7.
  3. ^ a b https://icv2.com/articles/news/view/53762/new-ceo-steve-jackson-games
  4. ^ https://icv2.com/articles/news/view/51511/people-move-quartermaster-logistics-promotes-phd-hires

See also