Crystal Frasier grew up in small town in Florida, where she spent her spare time watching television, reading, and playing with her Ninja Turtles or stuffed animals.[1][2] In elementary school, she started writing stories and drawing comics, continuing this in junior high school, where she drew comics for the school's newspaper.
In high school, she wrote Sailor Moonfan fiction, began running a gaming blog, and wrote her first paid article for a fan magazine published by Palladium Books.[3][1] When Palladium dropped her as a freelancer, Frasier decided to concentrate on art rather than writing.
In December 2001, Frasier created the webcomic Venus Envy under the name "Erin Lindsey."[5][6][7] In addition to dealing with the themes of transgender people and gender transition,[8] the strip also deals with other themes such as adolescence in general, William Shakespeare and women's soccer. Laura Seabrook, in a review for Polare, called the comic "really important", and praised the protagonist as a well-rounded, believable character, accompanied by a consistent and well-done supporting cast.[9]Venus Envy ran until 2014.[5][10][11]
Paizo: artist
In 2009, Frasier joined the art and layout department of Paizo Inc. as an intern so she could learn graphic design.[3] She worked in the art department until 2014.[12]
Paizo: game developer
In 2015, Frasier left the art department and became a game developer for Paizo.[13] Amongst other projects, she created Shardra Geltl, the Pathfinder Roleplaying Game's first transgender iconic character.[14] She also worked on comic books based on Pathfinder, like the Spiral of Bones and Dynamite series.[15][16][1][17]
In 2016, Frasier was announced as a Gen Con Industry Insider Featured Presenter.[19] In 2018, she left the Paizo game developing team to "focus on her freelancing career."[20]
Freelancer
Frasier left Paizo to pursue a career as freelance author, editor and artist. She contacted Green Ronin Publishing about the lack of trans-gender characters in their upcoming second edition of the fantasy romance RPG Blue Rose,[3] and this resulted in a good deal of work for Green Ronin, including becoming the Line Developer for the latest edition of Mutants & Masterminds.[21] Her adventure design credits include The Harrowing and In Hell's Bright Shadow.[22][3]
In August 2019, Frasier participated in the game designer panel "Playing with Identity: Tabletop Role-Playing Games and the Queer Power Self-Definition" at Flame Con about the impacts of queer identity on game design and play.[23]
Frasier collaborated with Val Wise to create the graphic novelCheer Up!: Love and Pompoms, published by Oni-Lion Forge, and described by Barnes & Noble as a "sweet, queer teen romance perfect for fans of Fence and Check Please!."[24]
Mimi Koehler called the book "a heartfelt, quick-paced, sweet, and super diverse graphic novel", noting that it manages "to pack a lot within those pages—from diverse representation, a sapphic love story (with the unbeatable trope best-friends-to-enemies-to-friends-to-lovers) to representations of transphobic microaggressions and teammates becoming friends for life."[25]
In February 2021, DC Comics announced that Frasier would be one of the writers for the Love Is a Battlefield special, working with Juan Gedeon on a story where Wonder Woman and Steve Trevor have a "date night that inevitably takes a superheroic turn."[26][27][1]
After hiding her identity during her first years at Paizo, Frasier came out as a trans woman following her transition, as she had no community to connect with, and wanted to help other trans people at that point.[34] In November 2020, she tweeted that she was also intersex.[35][34]
References
^ abcdFrasier, Crystal (February 2021). "An Interview with Crystal Frasier"(online). Pop Culture Beast (Online). Interviewed by Aiden Mason. Archived from the original on February 18, 2021. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
^ abCrystal Frasier (a). "MTF Nightmare No. 36"Venus Envy, no. 2 (December 1, 2001). Official website of Venus Envy (webcomic). Archived from the original on June 13, 2021.
^Frasier, Crystal. "Crystal Frasier". RPG Geek. Archived from the original on September 27, 2020. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
^Frasier, Crystal. "Welcome to Venus Envy". Official website of Venus Envy. Keenspace. Archived from the original on December 14, 2004. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
^Crystal Frasier (a). "Untitled"Venus Envy, no. 2 (January 30, 2004). Official website of Venus Envy (webcomic). Archived from the original on November 12, 2020.
^Frasier, Crystal. "About the comic". Official website of Venus Envy comic. Archived from the original on February 26, 2021. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
^ abFrasier, Crystal (April 14, 2020). "Time Travel, Punching Klansmen, And The Queer RPG Agenda: A Chat With Crystal Frasier". The Fandomentals (Interview). Interviewed by Dan Arndt. Archived from the original on January 20, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2021. ...I'm not proud of it, but I went stealth for a long time after I transitioned...I ended up coming out when I was working for Paizo.