Ryan Laukat | |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Occupation | |
Known for | Near and Far, Sleeping Gods, The Ancient World |
Ryan Laukat is an American author, and illustrator from Salt Lake City, Utah. He started in 2008, [1] and has worked on a dozen of boardgames [2] and illustrations. [3] He founded Red Raven Games [4] in 2011 [5] He is known for the unique art of his boardgames [6] . Many of his games are played through a system of a campaign and have usually stories in addition to the game mechanism. [7] Ryan Laukat regularly uses the platform Kickstarter to fund the games he published. [8]
When he was 13, Ryan Laukat would tape paper to normal playing cards as a way to design games of his own. [8]
Ryan Laukat is married to his wife Malorie and they live in Sandy, Utah. [8]
Ryan Laukat has worked for the Salt Lake City musical instrument manufacturer Cannonball, which was founded in 1996 by Tevis and Sheryl Laukat, where he played and customized all their trumpets and engraved the bells of all their saxophones and trumpets by hand. [9]
Ryan Laukat attended the 2007 Game Night Games in Salt Lake City, noting that he had spent several months working on a pirate-themed game called "Keys", and hand-painted the game board. [10] Laukat had already been the artist and designer for some games published by Rio Grande Games by 2008, and had designed a game called "Radio Active Cities" where players build cities and convince people to live in them. [11] Laukat was a member of the Board Game Designers Guild of Utah, and helped with the design on the 2008 game Dominion from Rio Grande Games. [12] Laukat was hired by Z-Man Games to illustrate the game Bridge Troll, which was published in 2009. [13]
Laukat founded Red Raven Games in 2011, and produced and illustrated all of its games including City of Iron, the Eight-Minute Empire series, and Artifacts, Inc.. [14] Laukat and his wife Malorie worked on games in their basement and they launched their first Kickstarter in 2011 to publish Empires of the Void. [8] He designed the Eight-Minute Empire game series, published by Red Raven Games. [15] He designed and illustrated the game The Ancient World. [16] Laukat designed the 2015 European strategy game Above and Below for which he made use of the "Book of Tales" concept. [17] [18] He designed and illustrated the 2017 campaign-driven storytelling board game Near and Far , a sequel to Above and Below. [19] [17] [20] [18] He designed the 2021 game Sleeping Gods, for which a free print-and-play demo was released. [21]
Paul Booth in his 2021 book Board Games as Media called Laukat a "créateur, or a board game designer with an identifiable style", [22] noting that Laukat "is aware that he has a particular style in his game mechanics and how much that can change his reputation among board game players". [23] Booth concluded that
"This study of Laukat's games reveals three different ways his créateur status can be discursively constructed: through the game aesthetics, through the narrative worldbuilding, and through the interplay between theme and mechanics. I chose Laukat's gaming output to represent the créateur for a number of reasons. First, there is a manageable output of games to examine. Red Raven Games has published thirteen games, ten of them designed by Laukat. Compared to the output of some designers, for example Reiner Knizia (who has published over 600 games), ten can be studied in a time-sensitive way. Second, Red Raven Games all have a recognizable aesthetic sense, mainly because Laukat does the art for all the games himself. Third, Red Raven Games has become a success in the board game industry: Above and Below (2015), their best-selling game, has sold around 50,000 copies, while the Eight-Minute Empire (2012) series has sold over 40,000 worldwide and has been translated into over fifteen languages. His highest-ranked game on BoardGameGeek (BGG) is Near and Far (2017), with a rank of 132 (as of December 2019). Fourth, on a personal level, I enjoy playing his games—while not a scientifically valid rationale, the fact that his games are fun while also retaining a sense of his particular style is a meaningful factor in the discursive construction of the créateur." [24]
A Eurogame, also called a German-style board game, German game, or Euro-style game, is a class of tabletop games that generally has indirect player interaction and multiple ways to score points. Eurogames are sometimes contrasted with American-style board games, which generally involve more luck, conflict, and drama. They are usually less abstract than chess or Go, but more abstract than wargames. Likewise, they generally require more thought and planning than party games such as Pictionary or Trivial Pursuit.
4X is a subgenre of strategy-based computer and board games, and includes both turn-based and real-time strategy titles. The gameplay generally involves building an empire. Emphasis is placed upon economic and technological development, as well as a range of military and non-military routes to supremacy.
James C. Christensen was an American illustrator and painter of religious and fantasy art.
History of the World is a board game designed by Ragnar Brothers and originally published in 1991. It is played by up to six players across various epochs, each player playing a different empire every round to have the greatest score at the end of the game by conquering other players' regions of the board.
The Charles S. Roberts Awards is an annual award for excellence in manual, tabletop games, with a focus on "conflict simulations", which includes simulations of non-military as well as military conflicts, as well as simulations of related historical topics. From its founding in 1975 through 2021, the award was almost exclusively focused on historical wargaming, changing to a broader "conflict simulations" in award year 2022.
Sons of Provo is a 2004 film written by Peter Brown and Will Swenson, and directed by Will Swenson. It is a mockumentary that portrays the experience of an LDS boy band named Everclean from formation to resounding success.
Alexander the Great is a board wargame first published by Guidon Games in 1971 that simulates the Battle of Arbela in 331 BCE, also known as the Battle of Gaugamela. A revised edition was published by Avalon Hill in 1974. Both editions of the game were notable for having what one critic described as "one of the ugliest maps ever to curse a war game."
Thomas J. Vasel is a podcaster, designer and reviewer of board games, and hosted The Dice Tower podcast from 2003-2022, which has more than 300,000 subscribers. Vasel began publishing board game reviews in 2002 on BoardGameGeek, followed by YouTube, and his Dice Tower website. As of 2021, he has rated over 7000 games and expansions. His first board game review was for The Settlers of Canaan.
Race for the Galaxy is a card game designed by Thomas Lehmann. It was released in 2007 by Rio Grande Games. Its theme is to build galactic civilizations via game cards that represent worlds or technical and social developments. It accommodates two to four players by default although expansions allow for up to six players, as well as solo play. The game uses iconography in place of language in some places, with complex powers also having a text description. While appreciated by experienced players for being concise, some new players find the icons difficult to learn and to decipher.
Theron O. Kuntz is a game designer who was an early associate of Gary Gygax and employee of TSR.
Lewis Errol Pulsipher, often credited as Lew Pulsipher, is an American teacher, game designer, and author, whose subject is role playing games, board games, card games, and video games. He was the first person in the North Carolina community college system to teach game design classes, in fall 2004. He has designed half a dozen published boardgames, written more than 150 articles about games, contributed to several books about games, and presented at game conventions and conferences.
Steven Sharp Nelson is an American cellist. He is best known as "The Cello Guy" of the classical new-age musical group The Piano Guys, with whom he has released eight number-one albums and dozens of music videos. He also has three solo albums to his credit. He is considered a pioneer in "cello-percussion", which enhances traditional cello playing with pizzicato and percussive techniques.
One Voice Children's Choir is an American children's choir in Utah.
Masafumi "Masa" Fukuda is a Japanese-American songwriter, music arranger, and choir director. He is the director and founder of One Voice Children's Choir.
The Ion Award is the largest board game design competition in the United States. It is held annually in Utah at the SaltCON board game convention. The competition started in 2009 for unpublished game designs, with the intent to bring designers and publishers together, and to recognize excellence in game design. The first Ion Awards had the support of national publishers including Eagle-Gryphon Games, Mayday Games, Rio Grande Games, and Out of the Box Publishing, and has continued to get national and international support.
SaltCON is the largest Board Game Convention in Utah held annually in Layton at the Davis Conference Center with the "aim of bringing people together with games." The event is family friendly, and focuses on hobby and designer board games. Unlike many other conventions, the board game halls are open 24 hours for attendees to play all night long. The event continues to grow in popularity, in large part due to its friendly atmosphere, and volunteer nature. The event had over 1100 attendees in 2016, and continues to grow every year. In 2019 they had over 1900 attendees.
Near and Far is a board game for 2 to 4 players designed by Ryan Laukat and published by Red Raven Games in 2017. In this map based storytelling board game, players seek fame and fortune and the eventual discovery of a mysterious last ruin. The gameplay blends resource management with a storybook, with players controlling heroes that equip and provision themselves in a town, and then set out to explore the map, setting up camps and completing quests. The game is a sequel to Laukat's Above and Below, which is set in the same fictional universe (Arzium).
Ian Parovel, is a French art director, film director, game designer, screenwriter, and designer living in Saint-Germain-en-Laye.
Tyrone S. Bomba is a prolific American board wargame designer, credited as the designer of over 125 board wargames and game items. Bomba is the recipient of the James F. Dunnigan Award, has been inducted into the Charles Roberts Awards Hall of Fame for his contributions to the wargaming industry, and several of his games have won Charles S. Roberts Awards.
Tyler Isaiah Huntley, nicknamed "Snoop", is an American football quarterback for the Baltimore Ravens of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football for the Utah Utes, leading them to two Pac-12 Conference South Division titles in 2018 and 2019. He was signed by the Ravens as an undrafted free agent in 2020 and earned Pro Bowl honors in 2022 while filling in for injured starter Lamar Jackson.