Also, please check out Michael's cartography portfolio on Gamer Printshop's webpage!
Could you tell us a little bit
about yourself?
I live in a small town in Illinois,
Ottawa, and I operate a family business called 2me Studio, Inc. as a
graphic designer and digital printer, now in its 20th year
in business. Having started playing D&D in 1977, I am a lifelong
RPG gamer and participate in a regular weekend game with my friends
using Pathfinder RPG as our primary system. Probably because I am
also half Japanese (through my mother) I have had a longtime love
affair with all things feudal Japanese, and is the primary reason
behind my creation and development of the Kaidan setting of Japanese
horror (PFRPG) which I publish as an imprint under Rite Publishing.
Past editions of Oriental Adventures while fun and inspiring also
contain a variety of cultural errors, that I’ve always wanted to
correct. I have always had an interest in the dark imaginings of
Japanese horror, and with the Kaidan setting, I was free to present
Asian horror tropes that are hardly explored at all in current
oriental settings while doing an emphasis on authenticity.
How did you get into artist game
cartography and what kind of projects have you been working on? What
have been your best experiences?
I’ve always been the cartographer
for my own games, having done so for almost 30 years.
In 2007, I joined the Cartographers’
Guild a website dedicated to the creation and support of artistic
cartography used primarily for fiction and the gaming industry, as
well as personal games. I began participating and consistently
winning the monthly map challenges (contests) and began to draw the
attention of small publishers and authors looking to commission maps
for their projects. In that first year, I created maps for 3 small
game publishers, and over the subsequent years have created dozens of
maps for dozens of publishers. In 2012, Paizo Publishing commissioned
to create the original hand-drawn map for the City of Kasai, for The
Empty Throne module of the Jade Regent Adventure Path. I also wrote
some of the City of Kasai gazetteer in collusion with Frank Carr and
am credited as one of the contributing authors for that work.
I am the concept creator, primary
developer, one of the game designers and authors for the Kaidan
setting of Japanese horror (PFRPG), published as an imprint under
Rite Publishing, though I share the copyright with Steven Russell,
and am the owner of the intellectual property. Since the project is
mine, I do all the cartography for the setting guides, the adventure
modules, and those supplements that include maps (there are several).
One of my goals has been to create game products with more maps than
anyone else’s publications.
A sample map symbol - aristocrat's desk |
Aside from doing a city map for Paizo
Publishing, one of my best experiences was the creation of an
adventure location/module/map product for the Kaidan setting called
Haiku of Horror: Autumn Moon Bath House which I was the
author, developer, primary designer, cartographer, one of the
artists, and did the full page layout and cover design. Except for
editing, and some design assistance by Justin Sluder this was a
project that I did completely on my own, and hopefully only the first
of many such products to come.
I am currently writing four map
tutorials guide books following a very successful Kickstarter in 2013
to fund them. I have the first book written, which is currently in
the editing stage, and large sections of the second and third guide
completed. As additional products from the Kickstarter, I am also
creating several map symbol sets, including both hand-drawn and
photo-realistic map objects covering both general fantasy and
specific niches as themed sets.
In your opinion, what makes a good
Pathfinder RPG compatible product?
Luckily for me, artistic game
cartography is very much game system agnostic, as long as using an
appropriate 1 inch equals 5 feet square grid, when including grids on
an encounter scale map, anything I might create, map-wise, is
compatible.
Generally speaking from a
non-cartographic point of view, a good Pathfinder RPG compatible
product should cleave closely to the Core and additional supplements,
while bringing something new and exciting to the table that are
generally not well covered by Paizo Publishing or other small third
party publishers. I think the Kaidan setting of Japanese horror does
just that and does so very well.
A Gamer Printshop product: Gothic Castle Map Set |
When and how did Gamer Printshop
get started?
In 2007, I was looking for additional
services I could offer at my family owned digital printing shop, and
came upon the idea that printing large format maps designed by
publishers and individuals for home games was a direction worth
pursuing and a way to provide a benefit to my fellow gamers in the
world.
Gamer Printshop has been the company
behind all my gaming business endeavors, including my current writing
project and cartography work.
How did you join Gamer Printshop
and what is your role or position?
I am the founder of Gamer Printshop,
thus I am the owner, publisher, primary author, artist and
cartographer, as well as the page layout person – I wear almost all
the hats. Really the only thing I have someone else do the work is as
editor. I wouldn’t advise any author to self-edit as it’s not a
very reliable activity to do on your own, in my experience. While
Gamer Printshop continues to print maps for gamers, as it has been
from its start, I am treating Gamer Printshop as my RPG game
publishing company to create map sets, map symbol sets and map
tutorials guide books.
Can you give us an exclusive teaser
about an upcoming product?
As one of the add-on products from the
Kickstarter, I am currently working on the artwork in the creation of
100 photo-realistic map symbols that fit the theme: gothic horror. In
my opinion there really aren’t many map symbol sets that cover the
gothic horror genre in support of such games and settings such as
Ravenloft, Shadows of Estern, Call of Cthulhu and many other similar
settings, including my own. I am creating everything from a
vivisectionist’s complete operating theater, aristocratic
furnishing, a Faustian wizard’s laboratory, torture chamber devices
and much more. It is very fun to create gruesome map symbols to fit
this niche.
What are the best things about
Gamer Printshop products?
Regarding the tutorial guides, although
I use Xara Designer Pro 9, a vector drawing application as my primary
map-making tool, the techniques I use are easily applicable in Adobe
Photoshop, Adobe Illustrator, Paintshop Pro, GIMP, Inkscape and many
other standard graphics applications. Including sections of one
chapter on many of these programs to point out where to find the
tools necessary to follow the tutorials. Thus the map-making
techniques I offer are easy to understand and apply to anyone that
currently uses a reliable graphics application. There is no
requirement to purchase one particular application to use the
tutorials that are being created.
Regarding my maps and map object sets, I have a very unique style combining both hand-drawn elements as well as using techniques the emulate depth. While I certainly do create art that fit the standard fantasy game, I am constantly searching for setting niches that aren’t well covered by other creators that still has a need for content.
Regarding my maps and map object sets, I have a very unique style combining both hand-drawn elements as well as using techniques the emulate depth. While I certainly do create art that fit the standard fantasy game, I am constantly searching for setting niches that aren’t well covered by other creators that still has a need for content.
What are the current goals for
Gamer Printshop? What are the biggest challenges?
A sample hand-drawn style map - the Crown Colonies |
My current goals are to meet
everything offered in my recent Kickstarter by the intended release
date, if not sooner. While I certainly have other projects in mind in
the form of themed map packs, map symbol sets, map tiles and more,
(as well as creating additional support material for the Kaidan
setting of Japanese horror ) – I need to get the KS stuff done
first, and where all my current time is being spent. My biggest
challenge in writing the books are that because the techniques are
usable in many different graphics programs, and though I have
experience using most of them, I only actually use Xara Designer Pro
9 to actually create maps. So I’ve been spending an inordinate
amount of time trying to learn the basics of all the programs
supporting the tutorials to help beginners know where to look in
finding the tools to use the tutorials effectively. At least the
second through fourth guides focus on technique without direct
references to those other applications. Anytime I need to refer to a
specific application, I will be pointing to the first guide, where
its chapters are more closely dedicated to those details.
Is there anything else people
should know about Gamer Printshop?
Gamer Printshop is still the
premiere RPG map printing service to home gamers and publishers. If
you have a map of your design, or even one you purchased from a
publisher, my company can print and ship your maps worldwide, with
optional lamination and at a very reasonable price. If you have a map
you want printed, it's best to contact me through my website contact
page.
Thanks for posting this, Mikko!
ReplyDeleteThanks to you too, Michael!
ReplyDelete