Sneha Girap (Editor)

Timothy Brown (game designer)

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Name
  
Timothy Brown



Timothy B. Brown is a game designer, primarily of role-playing games. He has been a designer at Game Designers' Workshop, an editor at Challenge magazine, and the director of product development at TSR.

Contents

Career

Marc Miller, Frank Chadwick, Lester Smith, and Timothy Brown of GDW designed the new game Traveller: 2300 (1986) as an expansion of the original Traveller role-playing game. Brown also designed the Gamer's Choice Award-winning Star Cruiser board game. Brown served as editor of GDW's Challenge magazine. Brown went to TSR in 1989, where he eventually became Director of Game Development. Brown was TSR's director of product development from 1991-1995, and oversaw the creation of their Ravenloft and Planescape game lines, among many other titles. Brown co-created the AD&D Dark Sun setting with Troy Denning and Mary Kirchoff. Brown and Denning led the project, alongside fiction editor Kirchoff, and they were soon joined by artist Brom, who contributed the unique illustrations that helped set Dark Sun apart from the other TSR settings, making Dark Sun the first of TSR's world designs with a more artistic sensibility. Brown and Denning also put together the 1991 D&D "black box" set, which became a top-seller for TSR, selling half a million copies in the next six years. Brown contributed to the design of Spellfire. Brown later went on to found Destination Games and work with Imperium Games. For Imperium's fourth edition of Traveller (also called Marc Miller's Traveller or T4) published in 1996, the designers worked on distinct parts of the rules, with Brown writing about aliens. Sweetpea Entertainment bought out the stock of the many creators who had worked on T4 and took over some of the day-to-day operations of the company; Brown took the helm of Imperium Games under Sweetpea's guidance, and was now the only official staff for Imperium, with others acting as freelancers. Brown, James Ward, Lester Smith, John Danovich, and Sean Everette founded the d20 company Fast Forward Entertainment. Brown also contributed to the designs of The Wheel of Time Collectible Card Game and the Dragon Ball Z Collectible Card Game.

Personal life

Brown is an accomplished guitar player and teacher. He is married and has two children.

References

Timothy Brown (game designer) Wikipedia