Jerry Holkins | |
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![]() Holkins in 2009 | |
Born | (1976-02-06)February 6, 1976 (age 49) Auburn, Washington, U.S. |
Occupation | Writer |
Nationality | American |
Genre | Cartoonist |
Years active | 1999–present |
Notable works | Penny Arcade |
Jerry Holkins (bornParkinson[1][better source needed]; February 6, 1976[2]) is an American writer. He is the co-creator and writer of thewebcomicPenny Arcade along with its artistMike Krahulik. Holkins sometimes uses thepseudonym "Tycho Brahe",[3] which is also the name ofa Penny Arcade character based on Holkins.
Holkins is a co-founder ofPAX (originally called the Penny Arcade Expo) a series of gaming festivals that began in 2004 and has been held around the world. He is also a co-founder ofChild's Play, a multimillion-dollar charity which organizes toy drives for children's hospitals.
Holkins, along with Krahulik, was included in theTime 100 for 2010.[4]
Holkins was born inAuburn, Washington and grew up at least partly inSpokane,Washington. He met future collaboratorMike Krahulik atMead High School, Spokane in 1993 or 1994 through theschool newspaper, where they became friends.[4][2] After graduating high school, Holkins and Krahulik shared an apartment together. Holkins moved toSeattle around 2000.[2]
Holkins created the webcomicPenny Arcade in 1998 withMike Krahulik, with Holkins writing and Krahulik illustrating.[4][5] According to an oral history, the two submitted cartoons to a contest run by a magazine in 1998. The magazine did not accept them but the creators sought other places to publish them, and worked with a site called looneygames.com to create what would become Penny Arcade. The strip initially ran once a week. Around a year later, they created their own website for the strip. In addition to the comic, Holkins wrote accompanying blog posts. Initially, this was partly because the format of their website left blank space. Holkins says that while now the posts are a key part of the site, when they first started he would delete each post to make space for the next one so the early posts are lost.[2] These posts are oftencomputer and video game commentary, but also include personal reflections or rants.[6][7]
According to Julia Swan of the Museum of History and Innovation,Penny Arcade was one of the first, if not the first, highly successful webcomics.[2] By 2000,Penny Arcade was profitable enough that Holkins could quit his day job. As of 2010, the strip was running three times a week and had about 3.5 million readers.[4]
Holkins is also the basis for one of the two central characters inPenny Arcade, "Tycho Brahe". Holkins and Brahe share similar interests and personalities,[8] though their appearances differ; for example, Tycho has mussed hair and sideburns, while Holkins's head is shaven.[9][10]
Holkins, along with Krahulik and their business managerRobert Khoo, founded the charity Child's Play in 2003.[4] Child's Play is acharitable organization that donates toys and games to children's hospitals worldwide. The charity was founded in part to refute mainstream media's perception of gamers as violent and antisocial. As of 2017, Child's Play had processed $44,538,978 in donations since its inception.[citation needed]
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PAX (originally known as Penny Arcade Expo) is a series ofgaming culture festivals involvingtabletop,arcade, andvideo gaming. PAX is held annually inSeattle,Boston,Philadelphia, andSan Antonio in the United States; andMelbourne in Australia.
PAX was originally created in 2004 by Holkins and Krahulik because they wanted to attend a show exclusively for gaming. Defining characteristics of the shows include an opening keynote speech from an industry insider, game-culture inspired concerts, panels on game topics, exhibitor booths from both independent and major game developers and publishers, aLAN partymultiplayer, tabletop gaming tournaments, and video game freeplay areas.
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Holkins and Krahulik playedDungeons & Dragons4th edition in Seattle for a day prior to its release, with Krahulik,Chris Perkins fromWizards of the Coast,Scott Kurtz ofPvP, andWil Wheaton.[11] Jerry is also featured in theDungeons & Dragons 4th edition and5th edition podcast, playing a character named Omin Dran, a Cleric of the Goddess Tymora (formerly Avandra), and CEO of an adventuring party named Acquisitions Incorporated. This has expanded into another streamed game entitled Acquisitions Incorporated: The "C" Team. This work has led to official D&D products featuring the Acquisitions Incorporated concept and characters.[12]
Holkins wroteThe Lookouts, a comic which imagines aBoy Scouts-like group in a fantasy setting. Initial versions were written by Holkins and illustrated by Krahulik, while the final version was also co-written by Ben McCool, with art done by Robb Mommaerts and colors by Rainer Petter.[13][14] The premise has also been adapted into a short live-action film.[15]
Holkins wrote a book of poetry calledLexcalibur, featuring poems about D&D-style adventuring with illustrations by Krahulik.[16]
Holkins created a fictional fantasy series called"Epic Legends of the Hierarchs: The Elemenstor Saga" as a parody of generic fantasy fiction, and created awiki for others to make up lore and backstory for the series. It rapidly grew in size asPenny Arcade fans joined in expanding the parody to describe the non-existent books, spinoffs, and life of the author.[17][18][19]
A review ofPenny Arcade in1Up.com said of Holkins, "Language itself, whether dirty or clean, is increasingly a focus [of the comic] as Holkins stretches himself to work his favored baroque dialogue and unusual words into the script."[5]
Holkins is married to his wife Brenna. They have two daughters, Samantha and Ronia.[20][21] In atweet, Holkins said that his surname "is a combination of Holcomb (hers) and Parkinson (mine)."[1] Old versions of the Penny Arcade site credit the work to "Mike Krahulik and Jerry Parkinson".[22]
Holkins said in his Penny Arcade Podcast that he sings andplays guitar in theband The Fine Print, and that his band once opened for the bandAnal Cunt.[23]
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