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  1. The About Jennell page on Jennell Jaquays website says this: 'Most of her fans and peers know Jennell Jaquays for the body of work she created using the name "Paul Jaquays" through-out the course of her career as an artist and game developer working on role play gaming and computer and video game development projects.'

  2. Jan 10, 2024 · At a Glance. Jaquays was an award-winning designer and artist for the tabletop and video game industries whose work is still celebrated. Veteran game designer Jennell Jaquays passed away earlier today at 67 years old. Her passing was confirmed by her wife Rebecca Heineman. Born October 14, 1956, Jaquays worked on tabletop and video games.

  3. Jennell Jaquays, artist, adventure designer, and game maker pioneered in the field of pre-created role-playing game adventures and fueled the imagination of an earlier generation of gamers. She continues to inspire a new generation with her work for id Software, Ensemble Studios, CCP North America, and the Guildhall at SMU.

  4. Oct 20, 2023 · Jennell Jaquays has a long road back. Rebecca Heineman is organizing this fundraiser. I’m fundraising to help offset what is going to be heavy medical costs for Jennell’s treatment and recuperation from Guillain-Barré syndrome. On Sunday evening on October 15th, she fell ill and with 36 hours she was barely alive and hooked up to a respirator.

  5. Jan 10, 2024 · Pioneering DnD adventure designer and trans-rights activist Jennell Jaquays has died. Her wife Rebecca Heineman shared the news of her death on Wednesday, January 10, through the Bluesky social media platform. Born in 1956 in Michigan, Jaquays encountered DnD in the 1970s, and formed ‘the Fantastic Dungeoning Society’ while studying for her ...

  6. Rebecca Ann Heineman was born William Salvador Heineman [1] on October 30, 1963, [2] [3] and raised in Whittier, California. [4] When she was young, she could not afford to purchase games for her Atari 2600, so she taught herself how to copy cartridges and built herself a sizable pirated video game collection.

  7. Credited authors for this version were Jennell Jaquays, Greg Geilman, and Steve Stottrup. While keeping most of the original Jaquays' text, this version fixed typos, updated the formatting and maps, and contained new material to incorporate into the Judges Guild Wilderlands of High Fantasy setting.

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