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James Wallis (games designer) : ウィキペディア英語版
James Wallis (games designer)

James Wallis is a British designer and publisher of tabletop and role-playing games.
==Career==
James Wallis began roleplaying in 1981 through ''Dungeons & Dragons'' and ''Traveller'', which were both licensed in the UK by Games Workshop at the time. Wallis began publishing his own fanzines, first ''Werman'' and then ''Sound & Fury'', and got to know game designer Erick Wujcik through the latter; Wujcik introduced Wallis to Kevin Siembieda at Gen Con 22 in 1989, resulting in Wallis writing two books for Palladium Books, ''Mutants in Avalon'' (1990) and ''Mutants in Orbit'' (1992).〔 Wallis also began working on his own role-playing game based on the ''Bugtown'' comics, and in 1992 he brought the game to Phage Press, where it stalled for two years due to creative differences.〔 His game ''Once Upon a Time'' was published by Atlas Games in 1993, where he met Jonathan Tweet, who soon became head of RPGs at Wizards of the Coast; Wallis brought his ''Bugtown'' game to Wizards, but he found no success there either as cartoonist Matt Howarth was unable to come to an agreement with Wizards of the Coast regarding royalties.〔 He co-founded the RPG magazine ''Inter
*action'' with Andrew Rilstone, the first issue of which was published in Summer 1994.〔
In October 1994, Wallis founded Hogshead Publishing,〔 a company which specialised in role-playing and storytelling games. Wallis based the company in the UK, and got a license from Phil Gallagher at Games Workshop to publish books for ''Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay''.〔 Wallis and Rilstone changed the name of ''Inter
*action'' to ''Interactive Fantasy'' due to trademark concerns beginning with its second issue, which was also Hogshead's first publication; the magazine only lasted two more issues after that.〔 ''Warhammer'' sold well, but Hogshead had problems with their distributor, and Wallis had to let go of all the company's staff.〔 Matt Howarth eventually pulled Wallis' license for ''Bugtown'', and the game was never published.〔 By 1996, Wallis was also working in the computer industry and shortly after moved into magazine publishing, working on ''Warhammer'' in his spare bedroom on evenings and weekends.〔 By the end of 1997, cashflow had improved so Wallis moved the company to an office, and hired Matthew Pook.〔 Wallis was able to publish his game ''The Extraordinary Adventures of Baron Munchausen'' in 1998.〔 He helped the principals of ProFantasy Software resurrect the Dragonmeet convention in 2000.〔
On 26 November 2002, Wallis announced that he was ending Hogshead Publishing, and Mark Ricketts bought the company name in February 2003.〔 Wallis started the company Magnum Opus Press in 2007 by getting a licensing for the RPG ''Dragon Warriors''; Magnum Opus published a new 1.1 edition of the game with supplements starting in 2008 before problems with the licensor ended it on 1 April 2011.〔 Wallis put out other books through Magnum Opus, including the debut novel ''Game Night'' (2007) by Jonny Nexus, and a new edition of his own ''The Extraordinary Adventures of Baron Munchausen'' (2008).〔
Wallis is a narrative media consultant, creating online games for clients including the BBC, the U.K. Home Office, and Endemol Television. He lives in London with his wife and children.〔
He has also created games and books for other publishers, including the award-winning card game ''Once Upon A Time'', which he co-authored with Richard Lambert and Andrew Rilstone. In 2001, he founded the annual Diana Jones Award for "excellence in gaming". He currently runs the gaming consultancy Spaaace, which includes the publishing subsidiary Magnum Opus Press, and his personal blog, ''(Cope )''.

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