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Gary Gygax dead at 69

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Blackjack Gabbiani

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http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080304/ap_en_ot/obit_gygax;_ylt=AqIs4REKh1JIjr7f5u0FQh3K.nQA

MILWAUKEE - Gary Gygax, who co-created the fantasy game Dungeons & Dragons and helped start the role-playing phenomenon, died Tuesday morning at his home in Lake Geneva. He was 69.

He had been suffering from health problems for several years, including an abdominal aneurysm, said his wife, Gail Gygax.

Gygax and Dave Arneson developed Dungeons & Dragons in 1974 using medieval characters and mythical creatures. The game known for its oddly shaped dice became a hit, particularly among teenage boys, and eventually was turned into video games, books and movies.

Gygax always enjoyed hearing from the game's legion of devoted fans, many of whom would stop by the family's home in Lake Geneva, about 55 miles southwest of Milwaukee, his wife said. Despite his declining health, he hosted weekly games of Dungeons & Dragons as recently as January, she said.

"It really meant a lot to him to hear from people from over the years about how he helped them become a doctor, a lawyer, a policeman, what he gave them," Gail Gygax said. "He really enjoyed that."

Dungeons & Dragons players create fictional characters and carry out their adventures with the help of complicated rules. The quintessential geek pastime, it spawned a wealth of copycat games and later inspired a whole genre of computer games that's still growing in popularity.

Born Ernest Gary Gygax, he grew up in Chicago and moved to Lake Geneva at the age of 8. Gygax's father, a Swiss immigrant who played violin in the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, read fantasy books to his only son and hooked him on the genre, Gail Gygax said.

Gygax dropped out of high school but took anthropology classes at the University of Chicago for a while, she said. He was working as an insurance underwriter in the 1960s, when he began playing war-themed board games.

But Gygax wanted to create a game that involved more fantasy. To free up time to work on that, he left the insurance business and became a shoe repairman, she said.

Gygax also was a prolific writer and wrote dozens of fantasy books, including the Greyhawk series of adventure novels.

Gary Sandelin, 32, a Manhattan attorney, said his weekly Dungeons & Dragons game will be a bit sadder on Wednesday night because of Gygax's passing. The beauty of the game is that it's never quite the same, he said.

Funeral arrangements are pending. Besides his wife, Gygax is survived by six children.
 
So many dice jokes today :S

I never got to play D&D (lol no friends :( ), but I wasn't ignorant to it. I did play almost every D&D based game for the PC though.

Sad day for gaming, and a sad day for the fantasy genre as a whole too.
 
Oh man. I just read about this.


It's a shame, too. I had the chance to get his autograph at GenCon last year, and passed it up. (And man. First they file chapter 11, then Gygax dies. Not a good time for GenCon fans right now, is it?)


I think we all owe him a great debt for what he's done.
 
You know, I was checking my Comcast email yesterday and saw the article about Gary...What to say about him other than he was a genius. A really awesome, really cool genius. I remember playing D&D at a church lock-in event (I was 8 at the time), and falling in love with the whole idea of...well...being someone else. Being a superhero, a quirky elf wizard, or *whatever* you wanted to play, you know?
I just hope that he'll be able to hold more sessions in the next life :p
 
He's rolling D20s in another plane now.
 
Good bye, Gary. Here's to the generations of nerds you touched, whether they knew it or not. Here's to the countless RPG games that wouldn't have been created without you. Here's to weekends with my friends, to countless rules debated, sodas drank, and dice rolled. A fallen comrade, a man who touched everyone who had ever played D&D, a gamer in every sense of the word. Good bye, and thank you.

(I posted about this in the real world, and neglected to check Geeky Misc. Silly me!)
 
He's rolling D20s in another plane now.

That's so inappropriate, but I'm having too hard a time keeping myself from laughing at this comment.

I don't know... dying at 69 is really young.. well I guess it isn't really young, but it still seems early. I respect what he did for the fantasy genre, rpg games, special appearances in Futurerama, and the rest of his accomplishments in general. Even though it seemed short, at least he seemed to have a success and fulfill his dreams.

*pours dice to the curb*
 
Did anyone see The Colbert Report last night?

"How much do we miss him? *rolls dice* Twenty."
 
I like the "rolling in his grave" joke personally.

I've seen a surprising amount of negativity towards him though. I guess when your biggest accomplisment is spawning Dungeons and Dragons...well...
 
I haven't really seen any of these jokes meant in a negative way. I never really followed Dungeons and Dragons or anything similar, but I can see and respect what he's done for games, and from what I've seen, so does everyone else.
 
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