Ree Soesbee
Ree Soesbee is an American game designer of
Early life and education
After Soesbee's mother died when she was 6, a relative gave her a copy of the 1983
She continued to play various role-playing games through her childhood and early adulthood, including Cyberpunk, Shadowrun, and Paranoia.[1]
Writer
Soesbee completed her MA in English Literature at
While she was working on her doctoral thesis about Edo period literature, she started to write short fiction stories based on the Legend of the Five Rings Roleplaying Game. She submitted some of them to the game's publisher, Alderac Entertainment Group (AEG), and she was subsequently asked to write a sourcebook for the game, Way of the Crane. She completed that as freelance work while still working on her thesis. AEG then asked her to join their staff full-time to work on more sourcebooks as well as the Legend of the Five Rings collectible card game (CCG). She subsequently made the decision to leave school without finishing her thesis.[1]
Alderac Entertainment Group
One of her first projects at AEG was to help her roommate Kevin Millard design the CCG Warlock.[1] She also wrote or provided material for many Legend of the Five Rings projects including the adventure Code of Bushido (1998), Night of a Thousand Screams (1998), and The Book of the Shadowlands (1998) in addition to continuing to write short fiction and novels for the setting.
She was also a contributor to sourcebooks and adventures for other role-playing games, including
- The Way of Kolinar (1999), a sourcebook for the Star Trek: The Next Generation Role-playing Game (Wizards of the Coast)
- 7th Sea Gamemaster Guide (1999), and 7th Sea Players Handbook (2000), for the 7th Sea RPG (AEG)
- Clanbook: Tremere (2000) for Vampire: The Masquerade (White Wolf Publishing)
- Adventure II (2004), a revision of an older anthology of d20 System scenarios (AEG)
On her own, Soesbee also designed a number of different projects:
- Jerimond's Orb (2000), a generic d20 System adventure (AEG)
- Blood on White Petals (2001), a d20 System "mini-module" in a medieval Japanese setting (AEG)
- Aztecs: Empire of the Burning Sun (2002), a d20 System campaign set in the Aztec Empire (Avalanche Press)
In 2000, AEG decided to publish a series of seven Clan War novels based on Legend of Five Rings, and Soesbee was asked to write two of them, The Crane (2000) and The Dragon (2001). Tom Findlay of The Sun-Herald gave The Dragon a positive review.[2] This was followed by the five-book Four Winds Saga series, and she again wrote two of them, Wind of Honour (2002) and Wind of Truth (2003).
In 2002, Soesbee,
Dragonlance young adult novels
Soesbee then moved from the Japanese background of the Legend of the Five Rings universe to the
When the two initial series finished, WotC then commissioned various authors to each produce a trilogy of novels based on one of the members of the original band of young adventurers. Soesbee wrote the "Elidor" trilogy about the elven thief Elidor: Crown of Thieves (2005), The Crystal Chalice (2006), and City of Fortune (2006). Crown of Thieves was included on Maja Beckstrom's recommended list of books about elves for young readers that appeared in the St. Paul Pioneer Press.[3]
She then wrote the Elements Trilogy about another member of the band, the young wizard-in-training Nearra: Pillar of Flame (2007), Queen of the Sea (2007), and Tempest's Vow (2008). She also wrote one book of the eight-book Dragon Codices series, Black Dragon Codex (2008).
MMORPG gameworld designer
In 2006, Soesbee was hired by ArenaNet to work on developing campaigns for the MMORPG Guild Wars. Her first project was adding material to the Guild Wars Nightfall campaign that had been developed by Jeff Grubb, as well as material for Guild Wars: Eye of the North. She also created "hero chatter" — comments made by a player's entourage of heroes when the player enters various areas.[4]
She then started working with Grubb on Guild Wars 2 as Narrative, Lore and Continuity Designer, creating an expanded version of the game with the Guild Wars storyline pushed 250 years into the future;[4] after several years of development, Guild Wars 2 was released in 2012.
ArenaNet also released a line of novels based on the Guild Wars 2 setting; Soesbee wrote the third novel in that line, Sea of Sorrows.[5]
Awards
- 2002 Origins Awardfor "Best Role-Playing Game Supplement": Celtic Age: Roleplaying the Myths, Heroes, and Monsters of the Celts (with John R. Phythyon Jr. and Mike Bennighof)
Publications
As sole author
- Legend of the Five Rings sourcebooks
- The Way of the Crane (1998)
- d20 System adventures and sourcebooks
- Jerimond's Orb (2000, AEG)
- Blood on White Petals (2001, AEG)
- Aztecs: Empire of the Burning Sun (2002, Avalanche Press)
- Dragonlance New Adventures sourcebooks (WotC)
- Dragon Codices
- Black Dragon Codex (2008)
- Novels[6]
- Clan War series based on Legend of the Five Rings (AEG)
- The Crane (2000)
- The Dragon (2001)
- Four Winds Saga based on Legend of the Five Rings (AEG)
- Wind of Honour (2002)
- Wind of Truth (2003)
- Dragonlance New Adventures (WotC)
- Dragon Quartet
- Dragon Sword (2005)
- Elidor Trilogy
- Crown of Thieves (2005)
- The Crystal Chalice (2006)
- City of Fortune (2006)
- Elements Trilogy
- Pillar of Flame (2007)
- Queen of the Sea (2007)
- Tempest's Vow (2008)
- Dragon Quartet
- Guild Wars 2 (ArenaNet)
- Sea of Sorrows (2013)
As primary or co-author
- Legend of the Five Rings (AEG)
- Code of Bushido (1998)
- Night of a Thousand Screams (1998)
- The Way of the Lion (1998)
- The Way of the Phoenix (1998)
- The Way of the Naga (1999)
- The Way of the Minor Clans (1999)
- Winter Court: Kyuden Seppun (1999)
- Unexpected Allies (1999)
- Winter Court: Kyuden Kakita (2000)
- Legend of the Five Rings Second Edition: Player's Guide (2000)
- 7th Sea (AEG)
- Vodacce (2000)
- Ussura (2001)
- Sophia's Daughters (2001)
As contributor
- Legend of the Five Rings (AEG)
- The Way of the Unicorn (1998)
- The Way of the Crab (1998)
- The Book of the Shadowlands (1998)
- The Way of the Scorpion (1998)
- Walking the Way (1998)
- GM's Survival Guide (1999)
- The Way of the Wolf (1999)
- The Way of Shinsei (2000)
- 7th Sea (AEG)
- 7th Sea Player's Guide (2000)
- 7th Sea Game Master's Guide (2000)
- Waves of Blood (2001)
- Star Trek: The Next Generation Role-playing Game (WotC)
- The Way of Kolinar (1999)
- 7th Sea (AEG)
- 7th Sea Gamemaster Guide (1999)
- 7th Sea Players Handbook (2000)
- Vampire: The Masquerade (White Wolf Publishing)
- Clanbook: Tremere (2000)
- Mind's Eye Theatre (2014)
- d20 System
- Adventure II (2004, AEG)
- Celtic Age: Roleplaying the Myths, Heroes, and Monsters of the Celts (2002)
References
- ^ a b c d e "Guild Wars Insider Interview With Ree Soesbee". Guild Wars Insider. 2012-01-11. Archived from the original on 2012-01-15. Retrieved 2020-02-18.
- ^ Findlay, Tom (2011-12-09). "Book reviews: The Dragon by Ree Soesbee". The Sun-Herald. Biloxi. p. 74.
- ^ Beckstrom, Maja (2005-12-18). "Elves: Read all about 'em". St. Paul Pioneer Press. Knight Ridder Tribune Business News.
- ^ a b "Guild Wars Insider Interview With Ree Soesbee, Part 2". Guild Wars Insider. 2012-01-11. Archived from the original on 2012-01-15. Retrieved 2020-02-19.
- ^ "Guild Wars Insider Interview With Ree Soesbee, Part 4". Guild Wars Insider. 2012-01-11. Archived from the original on 2012-01-28. Retrieved 2020-02-19.
- ^ "Ree Soesebee". FictionDB. Retrieved 2020-02-17.