Gerry Klug


Gerard Christopher Klug is an American game designer who has worked primarily on role-playing games.

Career

Trained as a theatrical lighting designer, Gerry Klug worked on Broadway, Off-Broadway, regional theater, opera, and toured with various 1970s rock bands. He won two New Jersey Critic's Circle Awards for lighting designs at the New Jersey Theater Forum.
Klug then began writing adventures for Simulations Publications's line of role-playing games. He assisted with the design of Universe, Horror Hotel, Damocles Mission, and the second edition of DragonQuest. Klug and Robert Kern had first talked about publishing an espionage role-playing game while working as designers at SPI; after SPI was purchased by TSR in 1982, eight SPI employees quit and Avalon Hill hired them to form a subsidiary called Victory Games. Klug began working on his espionage design again, which would have been called "License to Kill", but when Victory Games decided to pay for a James Bond license the game became James Bond 007. For a time, he was also design director for Victory Games. Paul Jaquays, with David J. Ritchie and Klug, designed the adventure The Shattered Statue for Dungeons & Dragons, although the adventure was also compatible with DragonQuest.
Chris Klug then began a career in the computer game field, with his credits including ', Europa Universalis, Diamond Dreams Baseball, and '. From 2001 through 2004, Klug served as creative director for EA's MMORPG, Earth & Beyond. Klug was the creative director for Stargate Worlds and the creative consultant for .