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   » » Wiki: Jeff Grubb
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Jeff Grubb (born August 27, 1957) is an author of novels, short stories, and comics, as well as a computer and role-playing in the fantasy genre. Grubb worked on the under , and the setting with . His written works include The Finder's Stone Trilogy, the and campaign settings, and contributions to and the computer game Guild Wars Nightfall (2006).


Personal life
Grubb was born in , Pennsylvania. He met in high school and married her in 1983. His first year of employment involved work with air pollution control devices.


Beginnings in role-playing games
Grubb became a enthusiast during his high school years. He started to play wargames including and Blitzkrieg, and the SPI game, Frigate. As a , he attended the campus war-gaming club and was introduced to the role-playing game, Dungeons & Dragons. Grubb said,
"I walked up to a group of players to ask what they were doing. One turned to me, handed me three six-siders, and said, 'Roll these. We need a cleric.' It was all downhill from there."
Within the year, Grubb attended , a table-top gaming convention, for the first time. He also ran his own campaign set in , his own game universe.


Career

TSR
Grubb's overseeing of the design of the "AD&D Open" at Gen Con in 1982, led to his employment as a game designer at TSR. He was a design consultant on 's 1983 work, Monster Manual II for the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game. got Harold Johnson, then Grubb, Carl Smith and in on the idea of before and joined them.
(2026). 9781907702587, Mongoose Publishing.
In 1984, Grubb was the principal architect of the Marvel Super Heroes game system.

Grubb was a consultant on the first edition of , and authored the first edition of the Manual of the Planes. Grubb contacted , author of numerous articles in Dragon about his home campaign setting, and soon Greenwood began sending Grubb packages full of maps of his world and background information for the setting; this collaboration resulted in the publication of the campaign setting beginning with the Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting (1987). He is the designer of the campaign setting, and the setting. Grubb felt that Al-Qadim was well received because the designers were able to hide the potential of the setting from the executives at TSR.

In the late 1980s, Grubb wrote four fill-in issues of the licensed Advanced Dungeons & Dragons comic book, and wrote 25 issues of DC Comic's Forgotten Realms series. Grubb started the Buck Rogers line for TSR with a board game published in 1988. Grubb continued to work on role-playing games with TSR for many years, long enough to be regarded affectionately as an "old timer" by . In 1994, he left TSR to pursue freelance work. Grubb wrote three supplements for the setting, published in 1997–1998 as the final publications in the Odyssey series.


Freelance work
When Wizards of the Coast purchased TSR inc., Grubb was engaged to work on games, settings, and source books such as for the Star Wars Roleplaying Game, d20 Modern and . He wrote The Memoirs of Auberon of Faerie for R. Talsorian Games and was one of the authors of the D20 Warcraft: The Roleplaying Game for Sword & Sorcery Studios. He has also been involved with Sovereign Press, founded by and in 2001. He designed the Unleashed set.


Comics, novels, and short stories
In 1988, , Grubb's first novel, which was coauthored with his wife, Kate Novak, was published as part of The Finder's Stone Trilogy. The second and third books in the trilogy, The Wyvern's Spur and Song of the Saurials, were published by TSR inc. in 1990 and 1991. Grubb and Novak continued to write novels in the setting, releasing Masquerades, Finder's Bane, and Tymora's Luck. Other settings such as , and have also featured in his novels. Grubb also wrote the 45th issue of Superman Adventures, "Mateless in Metropolis" (cover date July 2000).

Grubb's short stories are set in a variety of fictional worlds, including Dragonlance, Forgotten Realms, and Thieves' World. In general, his short fiction has been well received, with his story "Malediction" being described as amongst the best of those included in Thieves' World: Enemies of Fortune, while "Beowulf in the City of the Dark Elves" has been regarded as the best of the original fiction in The Further Adventures of Beowulf: Champion of Middle Earth.

Among his favorite novels that he authored are Azure Bonds, Lord Toede, and The Brothers' War, and his favorite short stories include "The Judgement of abd-al-Mammat" and "Lycanthrope Summer."

Grubb is the author of over a dozen novels and 30 short stories.

(2026). 9781932442960, Green Ronin Publishing.


Computer games
The novel Azure Bonds was developed into a computer game, Curse of the Azure Bonds, in 1989, and was published by Strategic Simulations. hired Grubb to write the story for the third installment of their franchise, Guild Wars Nightfall. Although credited as a designer under lead designer James Phinney, in an interview with he describes his role as more of an 'embedded writer' than a designer. Grubb was involved in designing the expansion pack. He has also done world-building and writing for . He is working as a writer and game designer for Guild Wars 2.


Bibliography

Novels

Dragonlance (shared universe)
  • Villains
    • Book 5: Lord Toede (1994),


Forgotten Realms (shared universe)
  • The Finder's Stone Trilogy (with )
    • (1988),
    • The Wyvern's Spur (1990),
    • Song of the Saurials (1991),
  • The Harpers (with )
    • Book 10: Masquerades (1995),
    • Book 15: Finder's Bane (1997),
  • The Lost Gods (with )
    • Tymora's Luck (1997), sequel to Finder's Bane,


Magic: The Gathering (shared universe)
  • Artifacts Series
    • Book 1: The Brothers' War (1998),
  • Ice Age Trilogy
    • The Gathering Dark (1999)
    • The Eternal Ice (2000)
    • The Shattered Alliance (2000)


WarCraft (shared universe)
  • The Last Guardian (2001), . This novel has been described as "an original tale of magic, warfare, and heroism based on the bestselling, award-winning electronic game from Blizzard Entertainment".


StarCraft (shared universe)
  • Liberty's Crusade (2001),


Guild Wars (shared universe)
  • Ghosts of Ascalon (2010), – first novel in a three-book series of stand-alone novels set in the world of Tyria, in the 250 years that separates and Guild Wars 2.


Star Wars (shared universe)
  • Scourge (2012), – An adaptation of Tempest Feud.


Comics

Forgotten Realms DC Comics
  • published 25 Forgotten Realms comics from 1 September 1989 to 25 September 1991 where Jeff Grubb was the author.


Role-playing books
  • (1992)
  • (with Bill Slavicsek, published by Wizards of the Coast)
  • d20 Modern Role-playing Game (with , , and Charles Ryan)
  • DL7 Dragons of Light
  • Eye of the Wyvern (TSR, Inc.) Part of TSR's "Fast-play Game" series for Dungeons & Dragons.
  • (with Aaron Allston and Thomas M. Reid, part of the TSR Audio Games series, TSR, Inc.)
  • M2 Maze of the Riddling Minotaur
  • Manual of the Planes (1987) Published by TSR, Inc.
  • (with Owen K.C. Stephens, published by Wizards of the Coast for the Star Wars Roleplaying Game) " Tempest Feud fails to rise to the exacting standards set by its predecessors."
  • (with Eric Cagle, David Noonan, & Stan!, published by Wizards of the Coast)


Boot Hill
  • BH4 Burned Bush Wells


Marvel Super-Heroes
  • Marvel Super Heroes Advanced Set
  • Numerous modules


Spelljammer
  • Boxed Set (November 1989), .
  • Legend of Spelljammer Box Set (September 1991), .


High Adventure


Miniatures games
  • Star Wars Miniatures: Rebel Storm (with Bill Slavicsek, Jonathon Tweet, & Rob Watkins)


External links

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