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Cam Banks

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Cam Banks
BornAuckland, New Zealand
OccupationWriter, game designer
GenreRole-playing games

Cam Banks is a game designer who was lead designer for the Marvel Heroic Roleplaying,[1][2] and the supplement to Serenity Role Playing Game, the Big Damn Heroes Handbook.[3]

Career

Cam Banks and Christopher Coyle wrote a new Dragonlance campaign saga produced by Sovereign Press in three parts: Key of Destiny (2004), Spectre of Sorrows (2005) and Price of Courage (2006). The series totalled 730 pages and detailed major events in the Age of Mortals.[4]: 353  His first novel was published in 2007.[5] He wrote the 2008 Dragonlance novel The Sellsword.[6] Banks was later the Cortex System line editor for Margaret Weis Productions, and in 2010 the system was renovated into the Cortex Plus system.[4]: 354  Banks was the line developer for the Smallville Roleplaying Game (2010), which he co-designed with indie publisher Josh Roby.[4]: 354  Banks co-designed Leverage: The Roleplaying Game (2011) with Evil Hat Productions' Rob Donoghue, Clark Valentine, and others.[4]: 354 

A native of New Zealand, Banks lives in St Paul, Minnesota, where he has been working as a brand manager and production specialist for Atlas Games since February 2013.[7] Before this he was a line developer at Margaret Weis Productions, where he led the development of the Smallville Roleplaying Game, Leverage: The Roleplaying Game, and Marvel Heroic Roleplaying in addition to continuing with Margaret Weis' historical properties, leading the development of the Big Damn Heroes supplement for the Serenity Role Playing Game, and working on the Dragonlance setting.

On November 1, 2016, Margaret Weis Productions released a statement announcing that Cam Banks and his new design studio Magic Vacuum had licensed the original Cortex System and Cortex Plus system and would be "taking over the design, development, and publishing of games based on these rules... for 2017 and beyond," coinciding with "Margaret’s retirement from RPG development to focus on her current novel and film projects."[8]

Bibliography

Roleplaying Games and Supplements

Cam Banks has been a freelance writer and designer for Sovereign Press, and a designer and line developer for Margaret Weis Productions where he first produced supplements for the Cortex System games designed by Jamie Chambers. Then he led the design of the Cortex Plus games.

Dragonlance

  • Design Credits: Dragonlance Dungeon Master's Screen 2003
  • Additional Design Credits: Age of Mortals 2003
  • Additional Design Credits: Towers of High Sorcery 2004
  • Additional Design Credits: War of the Lance 2004
  • Design Credits: Bestiary of Krynn 2004 ENnie Awards: Best Art, Interior and Best Monster Supplement: Silver Awards
  • Author: Dragons of Krynn 2006
  • Author: Bestiary of Krynn (revised) 2007
  • Co-author: Key of Destiny 2004
  • Co-author: Spectre of Sorrows 2005
  • Co-author: Price of Courage 2006
  • Dragonlance: Dragons of Autumn (Updated version of the original adventures)
  • Dragonlance: Dragons of Winter (Updated version of the original adventures)

Cortex System Games and Supplements with Margaret Weis Productions

Cortex Plus games with Margaret Weis Productions

  • Lead Designer: Smallville Roleplaying Game - 2009
  • Lead Designer: Leverage: The Roleplaying Game - 2010
  • Lead Designer: Marvel Heroic Roleplaying Basic Game - 2011 Origins Award: Best Roleplaying Game [1] 2012 ENnies: Best Roleplaying Game Silver Award[2]
  • Lead Designer: Marvel Heroic Roleplaying Civil War Event Book Essentials Edition – 2011 Origins Award: Best Roleplaying Supplement [1] 2012 ENnies: Best Roleplaying Game Supplement[2]
  • Lead Designer: Marvel Heroic Roleplaying Civil War Event Book Premium Edition (the same as the Essentials Edition, but containing the game rules from the Basic Set).

Books

Critical reception

As a lead designer on pre-existing products, Cam Banks was responsible for Margaret Weis Productions second ever Origins Award with Big Damn Heroes. His Supernatural: Guide to the Hunted was applauded for the design and detail work although criticized slightly for the adherence to Supernatural's canon.[9] After becoming line developer he ceased to use the Cortex System, instead working with members of Evil Hat Productions to produce all the new games he created using the Cortex Plus.

Reception for the Cortex Plus games has been generally positive. Both io9 and RPGamer reviewed the Smallville Roleplaying Game, Banks's first game as lead designer. They praised the way the game "had the heart of an independent role playing game and focused on conflict rather than powers."[10][11] Leverage: The Roleplaying Game was nominated for an Origins Award, and Marvel Heroic Roleplaying won two Origins Awards and an ENnie and was praised by SF Signal for how "authentic and true to the characters the representations felt."[12]

References

  1. ^ a b c "39th Origins Awards". Archived from the original on 2013-12-27.
  2. ^ a b c "Congratulations to the 2012 ENnie Award winners!". ennie-awards.com.
  3. ^ a b "36th Annual Origins Awards". Archived from the original on 2013-12-27. Retrieved 2014-01-04.
  4. ^ a b c d Shannon Appelcline (2011). Designers & Dragons. Mongoose Publishing. ISBN 978-1-907702- 58-7.
  5. ^ https://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/24/books/jim-butcher-one-of-the-authors-from-ambermush.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
  6. ^ "Cam Banks". Archived from the original on February 24, 2009.
  7. ^ "Atlas Games: Cam Banks to Join Atlas Games". atlas-games.com.
  8. ^ Statement on Margaret Weis Productions web site
  9. ^ "Guide to the Hunted Review - Supernatural - Flames Rising Horror Webzine". flamesrising.com.
  10. ^ Ed Grabianowski - Robot Viking. "Smallville RPG wields big drama". io9.
  11. ^ "RPGamer > The Saving Throw > Review". rpgamer.com. Archived from the original on 2014-01-02. Retrieved 2014-01-04.
  12. ^ "Roll Perception Plus Awareness: The Marvel Heroic Roleplaying Game". sfsignal.com.