Grant Howitt | |
---|---|
Born | United Kingdom |
Education | University of East Anglia |
Occupation(s) | Game designer, Publisher, Journalist |
Employer(s) | Rowan, Rook and Decard |
Website | https://rowanrookanddecard.com/ |
Grant Howitt is a tabletop role-playing game designer, publisher, and journalist. He won six ENNIE Awards for his game Heart: The City Beneath . His game Honey Heist , which inspired an online trend of self-published games with one-page rulesets, has been featured on Critical Role , The Adventure Zone , and Friends at the Table . Through his publishing company Rowan, Rook and Decard, Howitt is a co-designer on Kieron Gillen's DIE: The Roleplaying Game .
Howitt began creating games in grade school, running downloaded PDF files through a text processor. [1]
While in college he discovered live action role-playing and there he met Mary "Maz" Hamilton and his best friend Christopher Taylor. [1] He married Hamilton. [2] After college, Howitt and Hamilton moved to Australia and started a Patreon while he was legally unable to work there. [1] While living in Australia he started a Kickstarter to produce role-playing games. [2]
Grant Howitt and Mary Hamilton designed a live-action zombie roleplaying game together. [3]
Howitt began designing a new version of the Paranoia role-playing game with James Wallis and Paul Dean in 2014 for Mongoose Publishing. [4]
While living in Australia, Howitt designed his own role-playing game Goblin Quest, writing it on dozens of pages and spending weeks of work on it. [1] Goblin Quest was 132 pages and he published it in 2015, and when he found this production schedule too difficult Hamilton suggested he start designing one-page role-playing games instead. [2] He started writing one-page RPGs beginning with Force-Blade Punk (2016). [2] He since created many other one-page RPGs. [5] Howitt has a Patreon supporting an ongoing project with plans to create 100 one-page RPGs, and he has created Sexy Battle Wizards, Pride and Extreme Prejudice, and Jason Statham's Big Vacation. [6]
Howitt later became the co-owner of Rowan, Rook, and Decard. [7] [8] The first collaborative release between Howitt and Christopher Taylor was the role-playing game Unbound. [1] He created the game One Last Job. [7] Howitt created the tabletop role-playing game Honey Heist in 2017 as part of his promise to make one game per month. [1] He was the co-creator of Spire: The City Must Fall . [7] [8] He designed Heart: The City Beneath . [8]
Kieron Gillen teamed up with Howitt to adapt his Die comic into a tabletop role-playing game. [9] Howitt created the game Eat the Reich , inspired after Gen Con 2022. [10]
Howitt designed the games Heart: The City Beneath , Honey Heist , Eat the Reich , and Spire: The City Must Fall . In 2022, Howitt became a co-designer and publisher for Kieron Gillen's DIE RPG . In a featured interview on Gizmodo, Howitt described DIE as "a game about why we play games" and his goal for the final product as "a machine to manufacture heartbreak." [11] Howitt has also self-published a large number of games with rules that fit on one page. As of July 2023, Howitt has published 79 games on Itch.io. [1] [12]
In 2017, Howitt co-founded the games publishing company Rowan, Rook and Decard, with spouse Maz Hamilton as business director. The company currently publishes DIE RPG , Heart: The City Beneath , Spire: The City Must Fall , Honey Heist , Unbound, and Goblin Quest. [13]
Eat the Reich won three Gold ENNIE Awards in 2024 including "Best Cover," "Best Art – Interior," and "Best Adventure – Short Form." It was also nominated for "Product of the Year." [14] [15]
Heart: The City Beneath won six ENNIE Awards in 2021: Gold winner for Best Setting, Best Writing and Best Layout, and Silver winner for Best Art, Best Art - Interior, Best Game, and Best Monster/Adversary. [16]
In the 2020 ENNIE Awards, Royal Blood was nominated for Best Game [17] and Sexy Battle Wizards for Best Free Game/Product. [17] In addition to winning six ENNIE Awards in 2021, Heart was also nominated for Product of the Year. [16] In 2023, DIE: The Roleplaying Game was nominated for an ENNIE for Best Production Values. [18]
Howitt's design inspired a trend of "experimental zines" and "poetic lyric games" on Imgur and Itch.io. [1] In a feature article on Grant Howitt, Chase Carter for Polygon called him "one of the foundational voices in the current generation of tabletop RPG creators" [1] because the success of Honey Heist inspired other designers to create and self-publish one-page games. Howitt expressed the hope that his game design legacy would be, "Showing people that you don’t need to have a bunch of money or time to create something which is resonant and give people a fun experience". [1] Game Rant refer to him as "veteran TTRPG designer Grant Howitt" [9] and to their request advice for homebrew developers looking to publish their game systems, Howitt responds "Get on itch.io and publish whatever crud you've got as soon as you can. Don't worry too much about it being perfect—it won't be!" [9]
Several of Howitt's games have featured on actual play programs. In 2017, his game Honey Heist was used by Critical Role in three one-shot episodes. [1] [19] [20] In 2018, Howitt's game Crash Pandas was used by Critical Role in one-shot Crash Pandas: Too Trashed, Too Curious [21] and by Twitch stream Surprise Round in 4 raccoons, a car, and a dream. In 2019, The Adventure Zone used Howitt's Honey Heist system as part of their event MaxFunDrive "Fur". Heart: The City Beneath provided the game engine for the 2021 campaign of the actual play podcast Friends at the Table. [1] In 2022, Howitt worked with Marisha Ray on the one-page RPG A Familiar Problem, used on the Critical Role one-shot Sprinkle's Incredible Journey, and later published by Critical Role imprint Darrington Press. [22]
In her PhD thesis, Susan Haarman wrote that Honey Heist by Howitt was one of the smaller independent games "that either minimize or eliminate combat altogether. These games have experienced high levels of commercial and critical success" as "the player base for tabletop games continues to diversify, both patience and interest has diminished for games models that still manifest 1970’s mentalities and/or focus solely on violence". [23]
Howitt has worked as a freelance writer for mainstream publications such as the Daily Mirror [24] and The Guardian [25] and indie organizations such as Video Brains. [26] He has described his style as "Gonzo Tech Journalism". [26]
Keith Baker is an American game designer and fantasy novel author. In addition to working with Wizards of the Coast on the creation of Eberron, he has also contributed material for Goodman Games, Paizo Publishing and Green Ronin Publishing. In 2014, Baker and Jennifer Ellis co-founded the indie tabletop game company Twogether Studios.
An indie role-playing game is a role-playing game published by individuals or small press publishers, in contrast to games published by large corporations. Indie tabletop role-playing game designers participate in various game distribution networks, development communities, and gaming conventions, both in person and online. Indie game designer committees grant annual awards for excellence.
EN World, also known as Morrus' Unofficial Tabletop RPG News, is a British-owned tabletop role-playing game news and reviews website. The website is run and owned by Russ Morrissey ("Morrus"). It reports current news and provides insight into major product releases before they are officially unveiled. EN World was the original host of the ENNIE Awards.
Paizo Inc. is an American role-playing game publishing company based in Redmond, Washington, best known for the tabletop role-playing games Pathfinder and Starfinder. The company's name is derived from the Greek word παίζωpaizō, which means 'I play' or 'to play'. Paizo also runs an online retail store selling role-playing games board games, comic books, toys, clothing, accessories and other products, as well as an Internet forum community.
Evil Hat Productions is a company that produces role-playing games and other tabletop games. They are best known for the free indie RPG system Fate, Blades in the Dark, and Thirsty Sword Lesbians, all of which have won multiple awards.
Powered by the Apocalypse (PbtA) is a tabletop role-playing game design framework developed by Meguey Baker and Vincent Baker for the 2010 game Apocalypse World and later adapted for hundreds of other indie role-playing games.
Blades in the Dark is a tabletop fantasy role-playing game by John Harper, set in a fictional city of Doskvol, inspired by Victorian London and Gothic fiction. The game was crowdfunded on Kickstarter in 2015 and published at the start of 2017.
Die is both a horror/fantasy comic book about role-playing games, and an interconnected tabletop role-playing game system. The comic book and role-playing game were developed simultaneously, with content from one crossing into the other, and visa versa. Both the comic book and the role-playing game were written by Kieron Gillen and illustrated by Stephanie Hans. Die was influenced by the portal fantasy and LitRPG literary genres.
Banana Chan is a Chinese Canadian game designer and writer for tabletop role-playing games and board games. Chan and Sen-Foong Lim created Jiangshi: Blood in the Banquet Hall (2021). Chan has written for over twenty tabletop games, including the official Dungeons & Dragons campaign setting Van Richten's Guide to Ravenloft (2021), Dune: Adventures in the Imperium, and the third edition of Betrayal at House on the Hill (2022).
Lucian Kahn is an American role-playing game writer/designer and musician based in Brooklyn. His work focuses on LGBT, Jewish, and subcultural themes, typically utilizing satire and farce. His games include Visigoths vs. Mall Goths,If I Were a Lich, Man, and Dead Friend: A Game of Necromancy, and his music includes Schmekel.
Honey Heist is a very simple one-page indie role-playing game self-published by creator Grant Howitt in 2017 in which players take on the roles of disguised bears who are trying to get away with a large heist of honey.
Visigoths vs. Mall Goths is an urban fantasy tabletop role-playing game with LGBTQ dating sim elements by Lucian Kahn, with art by Robin Eisenberg. The ancient Visigoths have time traveled to 1990s Los Angeles and are battling mall goths for control of the mall. The game's tone is silly and the setting has many puns. The game was inspired by 1990s movies The Craft, Empire Records, Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure and Clueless.
Mörk Borg is a tabletop role-playing game inspired by heavy metal music, created by Swedish game designers Pelle Nilsson and Johan Nohr and published by Free League Publishing in February 2020. The game features dark themes, frequent character death, and a doom metal playlist. The title means "dark fort" in Swedish.
One Shot Podcast Network is a network of podcast series about tabletop role-playing games, with many shows dedicated to actual play, interviews, and discussion. It was founded by James D'Amato to showcase a wide variety of games and systems, including indie role-playing games, as an alternative to actual play shows that focus exclusively on Dungeons & Dragons.
The Gauntlet is a publisher/producer of tabletop role-playing games and podcasts. Their publications include Trophy RPG and Brindlewood Bay. In addition to game books, they publish a monthly game zine called Codex to encourage experimentation in indie role-playing games and OSR. Their games and podcasts have won multiple ENNIE Awards. As of September 2024, The Gauntlet has raised over $720,000 USD on Kickstarter.
Darrington Press is the tabletop game imprint for Critical Role Productions which launched in October 2020. It is led by Ivan Van Norman with Matthew Mercer as the creative advisor. The publishing label primarily produces board and card games along with role-playing games. It won two ENNIE Awards in 2022 – "Fan Award for Best Publisher" and "Best Setting Gold Award" for Tal'Dorei Campaign Setting Reborn.
Fabula Ultima is a fantasy tabletop role-playing game inspired by Japanese role-playing video games such as the Final Fantasy series. It was designed by Emanuele Galletto, illustrated by Catthy Trinh and Moryo, and published by Need Games in 2023. The game won 2023 ENNIE Awards for Best Game and Product of the Year.
Designers & Dragons is a non-fiction book series by Shannon Appelcline about the history of the tabletop role-playing game (TTRPG) industry from its inception in the 1970s through the early 2000s. It focuses on the writing, development, and production of TTRPGs from an economic history perspective, with detailed information on the internal workings of publishing companies. It also traces the development of TTRPGs alongside the fantasy literary genre. It has won ENNIE Awards.
Eat the Reich is a tabletop role-playing game about heroic vampires sucking the blood of Nazis during World War II. It was designed by Grant Howitt. Players choose from a set of six predetermined characters. Eat the Reich won three Gold ENNIE Awards in 2024.
Sharang Biswas is an Indian American designer/writer of tabletop role-playing games and interactive media, a writer of speculative fiction, an adjunct professor of game studies at NYU Game Center, and a freelance games journalist. His work focuses on LGBTQ and science fiction and fantasy themes. Biswas has won multiple awards for his game writing work as both a solo designer and a collaborator: one IndieCade award, four ENNIE Awards, and two Indie Game Developer Network awards. He was an Artist in Residence at the Museum of the Moving Image.