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Shane Lacy Hensley

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shane Lacy Hensley
Hensley at the Play game convention in Modena
NationalityAmerican
OccupationGame designer

Shane Lacy Hensley is an author, game designer, and CEO of Pinnacle Entertainment Group and is a resident of Gilbert, Arizona.

Career

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Shane Lacy Hensley is from Clintwood, Virginia, and began playing Dungeons & Dragons after seeing comic-strip ads featured in comic books in the 1980s.[1]: 325  Hensley later sent West End Games an unsolicited Torg adventure that he authored, which the company published soon after as The Temple of Rec Stalek (1992).[1]: 325  Hensley got more work published in the next few years through FASA, TSR, and West End.[1]: 325 

Hensley created the game company Pinnacle Entertainment Group in 1994.[1]: 325  Hensley reached out to local game company Chameleon Eclectic to publish a 19th-century miniatures game, which they agreed to published in conjunction with Pinnacle as Fields of Honor: The American War for Independence (1994) while Pinnacle retained ownership of the game.[1]: 325  Hensley had the idea for a new game featuring cowboys and zombies as he was creating Pinnacle, when he saw a painting by Brom of a Confederate vampire on the cover of White Wolf Publishing's Necropolis: Atlanta; he thus began writing the game that would become Deadlands. After completing a first draft, Henlsey had two friends and game designers flown in, Greg Gorden and Matt Forbeck; both liked his draft and bought into Pinnacle, although Gorden soon left for personal reasons.[1]: 325  Hensley did some computer game design work for SSI.[2] Forbeck left Pinnacle a few years later, leaving Hensley again as the sole owner.[1]: 326 

An announcement was made on September 13, 2000 that Pinnacle had been sold to the company Cybergames.com.[1]: 326–327  Cybergames used their income from acquisitions to buy other companies - causing harm to the cashflow of their individual companies and ruining their production schedules – and Hensley announced on January 12, 2001 that the acquisition of Pinnacle had been "undone" after considerable damage left Pinnacle with only a handful of employees.[1]: 327  Hensley joined the d20 boom, beginning a new d20-based Weird Wars campaign with Blood on the Rhine (2001).[1]: 327  In 2003, Hensley formed the company Great White Games and moved all of the IP from Pinnacle to Great White, as well as publishing the new game Savage Worlds (2003).[1]: 327  Hensley joined Cryptic Studios in 2004.[1]: 328  With senior developer David "Zeb" Cook, Hensley was the senior writer on City of Villains (2005).[1]: 153  Hensley designed the role-playing game Army of Darkness (2005) for Eden Studios.[1]: 342 

Hensley also worked with Superstition Studios on a Deadlands MMORPG that was never published.[1]: 328  Hensley was in charge of Dust Devil Studios and got Zombie Pirates (2010) published.[1]: 328  He later rejoined Cryptic Studios and became Executive Producer.[1]: 328 

Hensley has written several novels and designed a variety of games including miniatures wargames, tabletop wargames, and role-playing games, as well as substantial freelance work writing modules for game systems. He has also scripted at least one computer game. Hensley has been a Guest of Honor at a number of major conventions and has garnered several game industry honors and awards.[3]

He left Cryptic to make a Deadlands MMO in 2007, but the parent company went bankrupt.[citation needed] Hensley briefly returned to Cryptic in 2010 as Executive Producer on Neverwinter, then on to Petroglyph Games to work on the End of Nations MMORTS (published by Trion Worlds).[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Shannon Appelcline (2011). Designers & Dragons. Mongoose Publishing. ISBN 978-1-907702-58-7.
  2. ^ Hensley, Shane Lacy (2007). "Talisman". In Lowder, James (ed.). Hobby Games: The 100 Best. Green Ronin Publishing. pp. 305–308. ISBN 978-1-932442-96-0.
  3. ^ "Interview: Shane Lacy Hensley". The Gaming Outpost. Archived from the original on 2007-02-17. Retrieved 2007-02-18.
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