Anne C. Gray McCready (born July 7, 1960, in Williams Bay, Wisconsin)[1] is a game designer and editor who has worked on a number of products for the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game from TSR.
Born | Anne C. Gray July 7, 1960 Williams Bay, Wisconsin, United States |
---|---|
Occupation | Game designer, editor |
Genre | Role-playing games |
Spouse | Benjamin McCready (1985-) |
Early life
editAnne Gray grew up in Williams Bay, Wisconsin, and went to the University of Wisconsin–Whitewater majoring in biology, switching to marketing after a year, and switching to English the following year, earning her B.A. in English in 1982. "My first job after college was working at a printing company, where I keylined ads, business cards, and menus, and got interested in graphic design."[1]
Career
editGray "applied for a nice, normal job at TSR, as an Administrative Assistant with TSR's International Division, but I didn't get it. I did keep in touch with the company, and later that year I got another interview for a job as a Copy Editor. . . and I was hired."[1] Although Gray was not yet familiar with the Dungeons & Dragons game at the time, she said "My first real assignment as a Copy Editor was to edit the revised edition of the D&D Basic Set. I swear, I hardly knew what the D&D game was about. . . . and before I knew it, I was stuck with the job of editing boxed set after boxed set."[1] Gray was promoted to full editor after a year, and handled the D&D line and other projects. Gray met Ben McCready just after Christmas 1984, and they were married the week before Gen Con 1985.[1]
Works
editAnne Gray McCready worked as an editor on several Dungeons & Dragons game products from 1984-1986. She also did design and author work on modules such as Mystery of the Snow Pearls and Red Sonja Unconquered.[1] Her editing work includes products from the Greyhawk, Ravenloft, Dragonlance, Forgotten Realms, and Birthright product lines.
References
editExternal links
edit- "Anne Gray McCready at Pen & Paper". Archived from the original on February 21, 2005. Retrieved June 21, 2009.