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River Hawks take on roles for gaming studio startup

Several UML students helped develop "Favor," a new tabletop role playing game from their indie gaming studio startup, Eclipse Entertainment.
Several UML students helped develop "Favor," a new tabletop role playing game from their indie gaming studio startup, Eclipse Entertainment.

Life is rough on the streets of ArcRidge, a nation-city situated on the edge of a nuclear winter wasteland in the cyberpunk world of Morix. All ties to history have been severed by the interstellar war, and swashbuckling rogues run amok in a futuristic land where technology and magic are one and the same.

That鈥檚 the setup of 鈥淔avor,鈥 a new, neo-noir tabletop role-playing game that several UMass Lowell students have had a hand in creating and marketing 鈥 and the upcoming first release from their startup indie gaming studio, Eclipse Entertainment.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a ton of work, but we all love what we鈥檙e doing. It鈥檚 a passion project for us,鈥 says , a rising senior  major from Methuen, Massachusetts. He鈥檚 the 鈥渕arketing and business guru鈥 at Eclipse, which was started in 2019 by his friend, Dan Wulderbor.

Josiah Gennell
"It's a ton of work, but we all love what we are doing," senior business major Josiah Gennell says of the gaming startup.

First made popular in the 1970s by 鈥淒ungeons & Dragons,鈥 tabletop role-playing games require players to assume the roles of characters in a fictional setting. Typically played either in person or online in a small social gathering, players describe the intended actions of their characters, with the outcome determined by a game master or the game鈥檚 rulebook.

Gennell says that when the COVID-19 pandemic hit and people couldn鈥檛 get together to play in person, more started playing online.

鈥淭hat market has been huge,鈥 says Gennell, who notes that Favor鈥檚 rulebook 鈥 which is nearly 300 pages long 鈥 will be available early next year as both a hardcover and a digital PDF. The studio launched a Kickstarter campaign in May to garner presales of the game and generate fan buzz.

When Business Dean  heard last year that Gennell and his team were looking for graphic designers to help with the project, she created three $500 awards that helped him collaborate with a trio of marketing students from the : Jeremy Chamberlain 鈥21, Dana Lantion 鈥20 and rising junior Brett Mullett.

Lantion, an MBA student who earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in business administration (with concentrations in  and ), says the project allowed her to explore a different aspect of marketing.

鈥淕raphic design was something that I was interested in growing my skills in,鈥 says Lantion, who currently works as a digital marketing strategist for Birdhouse Marketing and Design in Boston. She also has launched her own digital agency, Marketing Squared.

Dana Lantion
MBA student Dana Lantion '20 is broadening her graphic design skills through her work with Eclipse.

鈥淚t was fun to work with UML students, since we're all close in age and all have similar interests in gaming,鈥 she says. Lantion designed the Favor logo and also worked on the graphics for the Kickstarter campaign.

The Eclipse team also includes Michael Gonzales, who is completing his bachelor鈥檚 degree in  this summer.

Gennell says that even before the pandemic, the team was collaborating virtually on Discord and Microsoft SharePoint. 鈥淪o when COVID hit, it didn鈥檛 affect us one bit,鈥 he says.

With a second game already in the works, this one a PC-based game called 鈥淲aylaid,鈥 Gennell is excited to see what the future holds for Eclipse Entertainment.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been awesome to work with people who are passionate and excited about the company,鈥 he says.