Tilted Cat Head
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Location: Manhattan, NY
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Quote:
Dungeons & Dragons creator Gary Gygax dies
Agence France-Presse
CHICAGO - Gary Gygax, co-creator of the iconic Dungeons & Dragons fantasy game and considered the father of modern role-playing gaming, died in his home Tuesday, his wife said.
Gygax had been suffering from a number of health problems including an incurable heart aneurism, Gail Gygax said. He was 69.
First published in 1974, the Dungeons & Dragons game, in which players create magical and heroic characters and guide them through a series of adventures, soon became a cultural phenomenon.
There was no game board in this interactive, imaginative adventure: just paper, pen, the dungeon master's rule book and a set of multisided dice.
D&D spawned a booming industry and has inspired a generation of writers, video game designers and filmmakers.
Gygax's cult hero status among self-proclaimed geeks is so intense that one fan even named a strain of bacteria after him.
But he faced intense criticism in the 1980s when the game became a target for cultural conservatives who blamed it for causing teen suicides, murder and devil worship.
"That really pushed the sales up," Gygax joked in an interview with GameSpy.
"What bothered me is that I was getting death threats, telephone calls, and letters. I was a little nervous. I had a bodyguard for a while.
"I'm glad that most people have been able to separate the fantasy of the game from the reality of real life -- games have nothing to do with real life. There are no real dragons, there's no real magic, no real magic swords, and certainly no real treasure... or I would have retired at home by now."
The popularity of Dungeons and Dragons faded in the 1990s as the video games boom began, but Gygax's influence in the gaming world continued through his columns and the more than 80 games, game products, and books he created.
A voracious reader with an unfettered imagination, Gygax worked intensely until his health deteriorated in 2004.
"He would be in a daze," Gail Gygax said. "Especially when he was creating a new world. One time he was painting a globe for two weeks."
She said that while he used computers to help speed up the designs for his games and the writing of his books, he never really got interested in video games.
"He liked the group environment where you were with people," she said.
"He played all kinds of games ... we would have a game of cribbage on our front porch every night in the summer."
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yeah i've been trying to get into a pen and paper game for about 2 years now with a group that plays from time to time. they've gotten older and their campaign takes a back seat to raising a family.
last time I played was with a large group of people at work. We'd commandeer a conference room on the weekends and play from morning until late at night. it was great! best part is that my wife likes to play too.
I heard this earlier but couldn't find much to corroborate the story but more and more forum posts about an email from his brother.
wherever he his, it's all good.
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Last edited by Cynthetiq; 03-04-2008 at 09:14 PM..
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