Skirmisher Publishing LLC
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Skirmisher Publishing LLC [1] is an Alexandria, Virginia-based publisher of wargames, roleplaying games, and historic reprints. It was founded by author, editor, and game designer Michael J. Varhola and is co-owned by Robert "Mac" McLaughlin, Paul O. Knorr, and Geoffrey Weber.
About half of Skirmisher's products have been published under the d20 System, a system of game mechanics for role-playing games published in 2000 by Wizards of the Coast that is based on the third edition of Dungeons & Dragons and named after the 20-sided die which is central to the core mechanics of the system.
Skirmisher products created for the d20 system include the books Experts (2002), Warriors [2] (2003), Tests of Skill [3] (2004), Nuisances [4] (2005), and Experts v.3.5 [5] (2005). Artists whose work appears in these books include Sharon L. Daugherty, Phil "Shade" Kightlinger, and Lissanne Lake, noted for her numerous Dragon Magazine covers.
Other notable Skirmisher publications include a reprint of the H.G. Wells 1913 wargaming classic Little Wars [6] (2004) — which the company republished in a self-standing form for the first time in 27 years — a reprint of Wells' 1911 work Floor Games (2006), which includes a foreword by game design giant James F. Dunnigan, and the 3rd edition of the Cthulhu Live live-action roleplaying game.
The company also has a line of Orc miniatures that it has dubbed the "Orcs of the Triple Death" and which it supports with a series of products that include d20 game statistics, descriptive text, and a T-shirt.
[edit] Significant Accomplishments
When Skirmisher published its first d20 book, Experts, in 2002, publisher Michael J. Varhola decided to dedicate it to Dungeons & Dragons creator Gary Gygax and to ask him to write a foreword to the book, believing that such an implicit endorsement would be an auspicious sign for his fledgling venture.
"No reader should be surprised at finding this prefatory piece herein," wrote Gygax in the first paragraph of this foreword. "As the principle one to whom this book is dedicated, there was no conceivable way I could refuse writing a short introduction for it without seeming to be a total ingrate. I mention this merely to point out the clever tactics of the authors, for the same ingenuity is certainly applied to the contents of the work proper." Skirmisher retained the same dedication and foreword in the revised, expanded, and redesigned Experts v.3.5, which it released in 2005.
In 2004, Skirmisher distinguished itself by becoming the first gaming company to publish in its books maps created using digital images of three-dimensional models. Publications featuring this technique include Tests of Skill and Experts v.3.5 (examples of which are available as free downloads [7] on the company Website).
[edit] History
Skirmisher Publishing LLC was not incorporated until early 2005, but prior to that had simply been "doing business as" Skirmisher Publishing since mid-2001. According to interviews with company founders, however, its origins are much older, and date immediately to a miniature wargaming development group founded by Varhola and Weber in the mid-1990s and ultimately to the Munich, Germany-based gaming circle in the early 1980s that included Varhola, Knorr, McLaughlin, and friend George Sieretski, who helped develop the "skirmish wargaming" rules from which the company derived its name.