Posts Tagged ‘employee bios’

The New Guy

Thursday, October 15th, 2009

As someone who wants to successfully work in a gaming store, I feel like I should both introduce myself and provide a short description of my ‘cred.’ My name is Kenneth, the FNG fellow at Game Kastle.

I’ve been gaming pretty much as far back as I can remember. My parents were big fans of board games and pretty much as soon as I could distinguish colors from each other my mom was playing Candy Land with me. Not the most noble of beginnings, but we all have to start somewhere, right? From there it escalated quickly through word expanding games like Boggle (not that great a game when you’re young and your vocab consists of words you’ve read in a Richard Scarry book) to Yatzee, Life, stuff like that. The pinnacle of my first phase of gaming culminated with Monopoly and Risk, both of which helped shape how I view games through today. Monopoly really helped sink in the social aspect of gaming, and the give and take nature of negotiating to score that last coveted orange; Risk instilled a love of war games and helped me look at the meta-game between the games (If you habitually backstab an ally in a game, people remember it and won’t trust you in future games.)

Games really kicked into high gear for me in middle school (phase 2), when I was leap frogged up into the big leagues. Different groups of friends introduced me to Dungeons & Dragons (2nd edition, the horror!) Magic: The Gathering (so addicting!) Battle Tech (zomg giant robots!) and Warhammer 40k (I sometimes wonder if I’m the only person out there who didn’t start with Space Marines.) This quad-force of gaming sucked me in, many of my nights where spend hammering through my homework as quickly as possible so I could make a new deck to try out that weekend or speccing out a new 100 ton mech to see how it’d match up. While I was developing a deeper appreciation for gaming as a whole, it still wouldn’t compare to the third phase of my gaming life.

Everquest. Love it or hate it, it changed people’s lives and how games were viewed. I really feel that this game helped kick start gaming becoming a phenomena. Everquest led straight to World of Warcraft, and between WoW and frat boy’s insatiable love of Madden 20XX and Halo X, gaming has become, dare I say it, mainstream. Getting back on topic, I started Everquest in high school, went from that into my swank druid in Wow. Post high school I found myself with a bit more free time on average, and I started getting heavier into raiding in Wow, and very consistent D&D (3.0, 3.5, then 4.0.) I even started painting my Warhammer figures, which was a huge step as they’d played years worth of games in their sexy pewter silver coloring.

That takes us to now. I’ve recently restarted Magic, I’m casually playing Wow, the new Skaven book looks like I’ll be dragged kicking and screaming back into Warhammer Fantasy and the new Guard Codex has kicked my interest in 40k back into high gear. My friends and I are trying out a bunch of new board games, and League of Legends + Halo ODST are getting some good multiplayer play time. In short, I have way too many interests and not nearly enough time to spread between them and I’m loving it!

Look for the red haired guy next time you head into Game Kastle, that’d be me, Kenneth the new guy.

Jeff. Last name: “From Game Kastle”

Friday, September 18th, 2009

I am Jeff from Game Kastle.

If you’re reading this, the odds are very high that you know me or at least what I look like. It has been three years since I started working at GK, and I’ve always worked the busiest times. If I don’t know your game, I soon will

I started down this path when I was in 4th grade, when I had a Wizard in a DnD Advanced 2nd Edition game. We never got past first level. I had one HP. I tried to GM when I was in 6th grade. I didn’t even have a Monster Manual. I was a child with no assistance trying to understand THAC0, Kits, Psionic attacks and defenses, and how to track encumbrance. We had no idea what we were doing. We broke the rules all the time. We had a blast.

Then came the great dry spell of my analog gaming life. Throughout Jr. High and High School my only board gaming experience came from my family’s monthly board gaming night. I cut my teeth playing games like Set and Sequence; Sorry and Cribbage. I learned how to compete with people without ostracizing them, and how to realize it’s just a game. I learned to focus on the fun.

College was next. During my freshman year I made a fantastic discovery. I was walking by a conference room that had the door open and overheard someone ask, “Can I re-roll my Intelligence?”

I stopped, turned around, and entered the open door. “Are you guys playing D&D?”

3rd edition had just begun. I learned anew. Feats and Prestige classes; Bonus Spell Slots and Grapple rules; a new version of Psionics and how THAC0 had actually worked. I crafted characters, sprawled in the common area amidst a sea of books and papers, with other students asking me what I was studying.

Time passed. 3.5 came, and with it the Ebberon campaign setting. I tried Exalted 1st edition. I tried Settlers of Catan and realized that there were more good board games than just what my family had played. I kept on watching 40K games and even bought a Tau codex.

I found a solid job and had disposable income. It was time for WARMACHINE. Escalation had just hit the table, and I purchased a large, potent Cygnar army. I poured time and money into every aspect of the hobby save one: Painting. I played every week.

The solid job eroded. The vaporware faded and I was unemployed. I went down to my childhood comic shop and applied for a job, as I had every time I had started a job search since High School. They had always lied to me, told me that they would hold onto my resume, and sent me on my way so that I could find a real job.

“Excellent!” proclaimed the assistant manager, “I’ll show this to my boss.” And suddenly I was in. I was living my childhood dream, selling comics.

But I came to understand that very few comics rise above the rest; that monthly serial stories are jilted and difficult; that years of dross can be ignited by a brilliant flash of excellence before fading into mediocrity again.

It was in this environment that I learned that gaming was my passion. I found a new place to play WARMACHINE, Game Kastle. I found a place where my particular nerd focus was understood and encouraged. I found myself shutting down the comic store as quickly as possible so that I could drive over to GK and hang out for a half hour before going home to sleep.
It was after two weeks of doing this that I realized I was working at the wrong store. It was two months after that that I started working at GK. It has been three years, and I’m still here.

I have seen games come and gone. I have seen companies fall and rise again. I have seen children born and walking in the time I have been behind this counter. I have absorbed entire rulesets and forgotten them. I have competed nationally and goofed around for the fun of it. I have made friends and lost relationships in this store. I have probably played your game, and if not, I know what it is.

I am Jeff from Game Kastle. And I have one last thing to say:

Have Fun!

Introducing Samantha- Whereas Being a “Gamer” is a Point of Pride

Monday, July 20th, 2009

They say that the majority of girl gamers are introduced to role playing through White Wolf’s Vampire. For me, it was 2nd edition Masquerade. The pathos! The juxtaposition of an evil nature and a good personality! The exquisite, elegant, story lines! The black velvet!

My friends turned me on to role playing when I was in high school, and for a while I was playing fairly regularly. But I wasn’t a gamer. I was just someone who played role playing games. They aren’t the same thing.

I blame 1920’s Call of Cthulhu for turning me from “someone who plays games” into “gamer.” It was the first game I played with people that cared more about the story they were telling than about power gaming their build. I’d always done improve theater, but I’d never realized how much I adored the effort of collaborative story telling. But with this group, I was able to design a complex character with her own quirks and personality twists. They say you never forget your first character. She was 34. She had turned her parents home into a boarding house to support herself after her husband left her for a telephone switchboard operator and run off to Sacramento. She developed a pathological fear of children due to her inability to have them. And, of course, she inevitably went insane when faced with the eldritch horrors that peopled her world.

That game hit the switch. It flipped me into the world of the gamer. I stayed with that until I moved, and when I got to San Jose, one of the first things I did was locate a group. With them, I tried White Wolf games for the first time since I discovered Vampire. Then I took the plunge and offered to GM. My first Scion campaign ran for nearly a year. Turns out, I’m a GM at heart.

Now, I GM at least one game a week, and play in at least one more. I have an opinion on the pros and cons of a variety of systems, and can discuss them intelligently. I have a bookshelf full of RPGs, and a want list that would fill another.

I’m a sucker for the highly narrative games, that are built around telling a story rather than completing a goal. I adore new World of Darkness as a system, and most of their re-vamped games (except Requiem. Don’t get me started.) Independent RPGs, especially ones with unique premises, make me happy.

And, as if that wasn’t enough, I just got a tattoo based on role playing game book art.

I think that means I’m a gamer.

Meet Susan: the Ravings of a Pokemom

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

When you’re young you plan your future down to the smallest detail. But it very rarely turns out the way you planned. Take me for example, I never thought as a middle aged woman I would be working part time in a game store. I never even really used to like games. Sure I used to play monopoly as a kid and I was forced to play yahtzee with my mom almost daily growing up(I now hate that game with a passion), but actual gaming? Not me. I was going to be a “professional” and make a ton of money. Enter real life, or kids, whatever you want to call it. I quit my “professional” job when my son entered kindergarten and never looked back.

It started small, candyland, chutes & ladders, you know, baby games. Then it all changed when my son was around six. What were these things called Pokemon that he kept going on about?? Monsters that fight?? What?? This couldn’t be good.

I bought him some cards. I didn’t know what to do with the cards.

I took the starter deck back to the little card shop I bought it from because I thought it was defective. “It has too many of the same cards” I said. “It’s supposed to” the guy behind the counter said. I took it home again and read the rulebook so I could show my son how to play. I didn’t understand the rulebook. I called a friend and asked if I could borrow her teenaged nephew to show me how to play. It sounds funny, but that actually changed my life! I loved the game, I loved the cute little monsters and I loved that my son always wanted to play with me! We began looking for places to play and found a Pokemon league. When that league closed down, I found another store and started my own! I even started running real Pokemon tournaments and getting paid for it!! Imagine that! Getting paid to play. Not what I would call real money, but still. When that store decided to stop Pokemon League, I found Game Kastle. When I first approached Ray about running a league at GK, he replied with “We don’t have a big Pokemon following.” I said “You supply the space and I’ll supply the players.” It seems to have worked out pretty well in my opinion.

Enter real life again. It was time for this PokeMom to get back in the work force. The problem was, I didn’t want to be a “professional” anymore. So I bounced around a few part time jobs and one day out of the blue Ray asks if I want to work at Game Kastle.

So I have been here for a awhile and though I may not know tons about everything we sell, I am learning more everyday and I can pretty much answer any question about

Pokemon. I’m not even sure how long I have been an actual employee as opposed to a customer running events here as it all blurs together. Some things I do know though are

that I LOVE my job. If GK ever wants to get rid me, they will have to drag my dead, bloody body out of here, or fire me, one or the other. I’m not quitting.

I love ALL my co-workers, even the scary ones.

If Pokemon were real, I might be a dog person.

I’m glad Pokemon are not real because a giant three headed bird would terrify me!

Things always have a way of working out, don’t they?

See you in the shop!!

GK PokeMom

~Susan

Introducing Jason

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

I used to think I was a nerd. A Kirk vs Piccard Han shot first nerd. I was very wrong. I mistakenly thought these were just labels but now I know that they are ranks to be earned.

I am slowly earning my stripes, with each game played, each mini painted and every new rule memorized. Blogging is a new and awkward experience for me as well. I always thought that a diary was something a person would want to keep secret but that’s another blog.

I know that I will never be a gamer. I lack the energy level, attention to the most minute of details and don’t care for Mountain Dew. I do however enjoy the company of gamers and this job allows me the opportunity to spend time with you folks and get to hear the gamer perspective. When I am old and grey I will fondly think back on the time that Jeff talked about Transformers or the late nights losing yet another game of Dominion.

I still feel out of place here from time to time. I still cant tell the difference between Space Marines and Chaos Space Marines and for this I fully expect to get my truck egged this Sunday. To date I have only painted one mini and as far as rules are concerned, I am still reading my first non Star Wars set (Spinespur). But one tries and if I want to stand a chance in another game of Power Grid I had better do my homework.

Toodles,
Your Girl Friday.

~Jason