Frank Chadwick


Frank Chadwick is an American multiple-award-winning game designer and New York Times Best Selling author. He has designed hundreds of games, his most notable being the RPGs Traveller, and Twilight 2000, and the wargame series Europa and The Third World War.

Beginnings

Frank Chadwick formed the ISU Game Club at Illinois State University with Rich Banner. The club focused on wargaming, but the students also started designing games for fun and convinced the university to fund a new program called SIMRAD, which was intended to help instructors produce specifications for simulation games. They used their club funding to design war games. They also formed a small educational games organization in response to a project by the university to bring new ideas into the system. After failing to win this project, Chadwick and Banner, along with newcomers Marc Miller and Loren Wiseman, continued to work together, forming Game Designers' Workshop. When ISU stopped funding SIMRAD after 18 months, they founded Game Designers' Workshop on June 22, 1973 as a commercial outlet for their creativity, initially headquartering the company out of Chadwick's and Miller's apartment.

Game Designers' Workshop

There is little doubt that, even in the rather busy pantheon of industry heroes, Frank Chadwick is a Zeus amongst the Ajaxes. He is one of—if not THE—finest game designer working today. Since GDW's emergence in the mid-1970s, Chadwick has been GDW's main designer, producing a body of work remarkable for its breadth and width.... ever resourceful, Frank C covered his simulated butt with the out-of-sight success of his Desert Shield Fact Book. Its reported, six-figure sales will probably bank-roll the company for the next decade. And, as if that weren't enough, he has steered GDW from a small-town, Third World company to its status as one of the major simulation and RPG publishers in the market today. Frank is also president of the industry professional association, the Game Manufacturers Association, so GDW's tentacles reach out to almost every cave in which hobbyists can hide in. If dice produced olive oil, there is no doubt that Frank Chadwick would be wargaming's Godfather.
Game Designers' Workshop existed from 1973 until 1996. There, he designed several well-known and award-winning games, including En Garde! in 1975, Space: 1889 in 1989, and Twilight 2000 in 1984. Chadwick and Miller designed Traveller. Game Designers' Workshop also published the Gulf War Fact Book, a book he wrote on the military capabilities of the United States and Iraq at the time of the Gulf War. The book was on the New York Times bestselling list, and led to appearances on various news programs by Chadwick. After Game Designers' Workshop shut down, the rights to Space: 1889 went to Chadwick.

After Game Designers' Workshop

Chadwick currently blogs on history and military issues at Greathistory.com.

Awards and recognition

Chadwick was inducted into the Charles Roberts Awards Hall of Fame and Origins Hall of Fame in 1984. He won a Charles S. Roberts Award in 1980, 1981 and 1989, was nominated for an Origins Award in 2009.

Works

Below are some of Chadwick's most notable works.

Design credits

  • 1973: Drang Nach Osten!, wargame, with Rich Banner
  • 1975: En Garde!, RPG, with Darryl Hany
  • 1975: ', wargame, with John Astell
  • 1977: Imperium, wargame, with John Harshman and Marc W. Miller
  • 1977: Traveller, RPG, with Marc W. Miller, John Harshman, Loren K. Wiseman, and many others
  • 1980: Tacforce, miniatures board wargame, with Marc W. Miller- CSR Award Winner
  • 1980: Azhanti High Lightning, boardgame linked to Traveller RPG, with Marc Miller
  • 1981: A House Divided, wargame, two-time CSR Award Winner
  • 1981: Striker, miniatures wargame
  • 1983: Assault, wargame
  • 1984: The Third World War, wargame
  • 1984: Fire in the East, wargame, with John Astell and Rich Banner
  • 1984: Twilight: 2000, RPG, with John Astell, John Harshman, Loren K. Wiseman
  • 1988: ', RPG, with Marc W. Miller and others
  • 1988,1992,1997: Command Decision, miniatures wargame
  • 1994: Volley and Bayonet, miniatures wargame
  • 2006: Command Decision: Test of Battle, miniatures wargame, with Glenn Kidd

    Fiction

''Space: 1889 & Beyond'' series

  1. How Dark the World Becomes, Baen Books,, science fiction crime novel
  2. Come the Revolution, Baen Books,, science fiction sequel to How Dark the World Becomes
  3. Chain of Command. Baen Books,, science fiction, set in the same universe as How Dark the World Becomes and Come the Revolution, but with new characters.
  4. Ship of Destiny, Baen Books,, sequel to Chain of Command