Tom Wham Explained

Tom Wham
Birth Place:Chester, Illinois, United States
Nationality:American
Known For:Fantasy art, Illustration
Website:www.tomwham.com

Tom Wham (born 1944) is a designer of board games who has also produced artwork, including that for his own games.

Career

Early life and Guidon Games

Born in Chester, Illinois, Wham worked a variety of odd jobs during his early adult life. After serving four years in the U.S. Navy, he worked for the Guidon Games hobby shop in Maine[1] where he got his first game, a variant on a Civil War naval miniatures campaign, published.[2] One of Wham's books was published in the same series of "Wargaming with Miniatures" books from Guidon Games that began in 1971 with Chainmail.[3] In 1972, Wham got a job with Don Lowry at Guidon Games, in the shipping/layout department of Campaign magazine; there, he co-authored a set of Civil War naval miniature rules, Ironclad.[4] Afterwards he became a prison guard in his hometown, then held an office job in Denver.

TSR

In May 1977 he began working for TSR, Inc. at their Lake Geneva, Wisconsin headquarters as a general office worker, the company's 13th employee.[4] After running the Dungeon Hobby Shop for a summer, he was moved upstairs to the company's art department.[4] Wham worked with Dave Sutherland and Dave Trampier on the original Monster Manual.[4] Wham began doing some creative work for the company, contributing a handful of illustrations for the original AD&D Monster Manual, including the creature called the beholder. Other work included co-editing (with Timothy Jones, Mike Carr, and Brian Blume) the first edition of Gamma World.[5] He also made a deal with Tim Kask, editor of The Dragon, to do a game in the centerfold, called Snit Smashing; this led to other games in Dragon, including The Awful Green Things from Outer Space.[4] These games, printed on cardstock and included in the centerfold of the magazine, usually featured artwork supplied by Wham.

Notable games published this way include:

After TSR

After TSR, Wham collaborated on books with Rose Estes, and did his own novelette in Christopher Stasheff's The Exotic Enchanter.[4] More games followed, including Kings & Things (with Rob Kuntz), the SimCity card game, and Iron Dragon.[4] Later efforts include a reprint of Snits and Awful Green Things from Outer Space from Steve Jackson Games, and Planet Busters by Troll Lord Games.[4]

Wham designed the board game "King of the Tabletop" with Robert J. Kuntz, which was published in Dragon #77 (September 1983); the game was expanded and published separately as the Origins award-winner Kings & Things (1986) by West End Games.[3]

Since leaving TSR, Wham has designed many more games, including collaborating with James M. Ward on the board game Dragon Lairds, published in April 2008, and Feudality published by Z-man Games Inc. in 2011.[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sacco . Ciro Alessandro . The Ultimate Interview with Gary Gygax . thekyngdoms.com . 2008-10-24.
  2. Knorr . Bryce . Wham's Revenge: his games . Dragon #40 . V . 2 . 14–17 . TSR, Inc. . . August 1980 .
  3. Book: Shannon Appelcline. Designers & Dragons. Mongoose Publishing. 2011. 978-1-907702-58-7.
  4. Book: Wham, Tom . . . Lowder . James . James Lowder . . 2007 . 251–253 . 978-1-932442-96-0.
  5. Web site: Fewer . Greg . Gamma World: Science Fantasy Role-Playing Game (1981) :: Pen & Paper RPG Database . 28 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100910003150/http://pen-paper.net/rpgdb.php?op=showbook&bookid=5303 . 10 September 2010.
  6. http://www.tomwham.com/dlaird.html Tom Wham.com