Dungeons and Dragons Co-Creator Interviewed 30
spongebob writes "The great Dave Arneson was interviewed on his current work and upcoming releases at EnWorld. Arneson is one of the most important figures in gaming, because he was co-author of Dungeons & Dragons, that little game who spawned an entire industry (or two, if we count videogames). Despite this, he doesn't enjoy the immense recognition given to Gary Gygax, the other author of Dungeons & Dragons. This is perhaps explainable with the fact that Gary Gygax had a long and high profile career as game designer and manager of TSR Hobbies (then TSR) for many years and for Advanced Dungeons & Dragons' creation. Anyway, Dave remains a sort of 'unsung legend' of the gaming world."
Re:Interseting stuff (Score:2)
"The times, they be a'changin'" -Dylan
SB
Re:a letter to pseudo-nerds (i.e. d&d players) (Score:5, Funny)
Re:a letter to pseudo-nerds (i.e. d&d players) (Score:4, Funny)
Re:a letter to pseudo-nerds (i.e. d&d players) (Score:2, Insightful)
THEY give geeks a bad name? They're not the contrived, egotistic, homophobe douchebags you seem to be. Why do you bother posting negative stuff when all it accomplished is making you look retarded?
Re:a letter to pseudo-nerds (i.e. d&d players) (Score:4, Insightful)
We play a monthly campaign with a few (7) friends. Even my GF has got worked up into it more than I have sometimes. And even though it's RP, you're with friends. That's the real reason it's fun.
That's why single player Diablo 2, NWN, and any other RPG is really not fun.
And as a last not, taking RP too far is quite scary. Hell, taking anything too far is scary to deal with. Though, RP is a great way to get with friends for a fun game.
And yes, I know you're a troll.
Re:a letter to pseudo-nerds (i.e. d&d players) (Score:5, Funny)
You are completely wrong. I play a cleric.
Re:a letter to pseudo-nerds (i.e. d&d players) (Score:1)
-Jeff
He plays the game himself (Score:5, Funny)
WooHoo! I'm almost famous! (Score:3, Informative)
In fact, my former supervisor's cubicle is right across from his!
(I can already hear the paparazzi!)
Name recognition (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Too much credit here... (Score:5, Informative)
You are wrong, plain and simple. Among the most popular of the first videogames to hit the market were based off of D&D. To this day we still see analogs of the D20 system fostered by Gygax and Arneson, such games still happen to be a staple of the industry.
And BTW, editors, D&D spawned 3 industries. The first CCG to go mainstream (M:tG) was heavily influenced by D&D itself (spoke the creator).
Re:Too much credit here... (Score:2)
What are you smoking? The most popular videogames were Asteroids, Space Duel, Pac-Man, Space Invaders and a bunch of other things which are totally unrelated to D&D. In fact, they were mostly space-related. I suppose you could point to the Atari 2600 Adventure game, but that hardly qualifies as evidence of one industry spawning another. It wasn't until LATE in the videogame craze
Re:Too much credit here... (Score:2)
Second, you're probably talking about games like spacewar or the endless variations on the Trek game, and once again I think you'll find most of those games were also space-related.
Third, there is no shortage of D
Re:Too much credit here... (Score:1)
My Hello World (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:My Hello World (Score:2)
Ditto.
One of the first things I used to learn about a new programming language was how to generate random numbers so I could write a character generator.
I always used my own programs while GM'ing to randomly generate and keep track of NPC and monster stats.
FMMP! (Score:2, Funny)
(First Magic Missile Post)
Re:FMMP! (Score:2)
Re:FMMP! (Score:1)
Just a side note on Gary (Score:4, Interesting)
Oh dear.. (Score:2, Funny)
The reign of the single author paradigm (Score:3, Funny)