Christian T. Petersen
![]() | This biographical article is written encyclopedic . (February 2017) |
Christian T. Petersen | |
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Born | Game designer |
Known for | (founder) Fantasy Flight Games, President of Asmodee North America |
Christian T. Petersen is a
Early life
Christian T. Petersen was born in the United States, but spent his childhood in Denmark; while he was still only just in high school there he founded the company Pegasus Spil Import which imported games from Avalon Hill into Scandinavia, and he also founded Games Weekend, the second games convention in Denmark.[1]: 344 Petersen came back to live in the United States in 1991 and started studies for his BA degree in Economics at St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minnesota.[1]: 344
Fantasy Flight Games
Petersen founded Fantasy Flight Publishing in June 1995 after completing four years of college.[1]: 344 Petersen at first wanted to call this company Pegasus Publishing but he found that aside from his own first company "Pegasus" had been used as a company name too often so he chose a name evocative of the fantasy flight that a pegasus would take.[1]: 344
Petersen loved European comics and originally intended to use the company to republish three comics for which he had obtained the rights negotiations with European publishers: Lucky Luke, Spirou & Fantasio and Percevan.[1]: 344 Petersen started by publishing those licensed comics, and he began importing and distributing more popular titles such as Asterix and Tintin when he found out people wanted them, and he creating Downtown Distribution and started distributing even more titles when he learned people wanted him to do that.[1]: 344 Petersen read Comics & Games Retailer, which also printed data regularly about the gaming field, so he took his experience with Danish gaming and started with game publication by designing Twilight Imperium (1997).[1]: 344
Fantasy Flight Publishing became known as Fantasy Flight Games (FFG), and sold Downtown Distribution by early 1998, the last part of its comic book business, to focus on the gaming market instead.[1]: 344 Petersen had been a fan of Call of Cthulhu for many years, and this interest led Petersen to get a license from Chaosium to have his company produce a series of supplements for Call of Cthulhu.[1]: 344 Petersen and Darrell Hardy wrote the Nocturnum adventure trilogy for Call of Cthulhu: Long Shades (1997), Hollow Winds (1998) and Deep Secrets (1999).[1]: 345 Petersen and Kevin Wilson designed the Game of Thrones (2003) wargame, and Doom: The Boardgame (2004).[1]: 347
As CEO of Fantasy Flight Games, Petersen led the company to publish more than 400 titles, making it one of the most successful publishers in the hobby games industry.