Growing up my friends and I played Dungeons & Dragons, a lot (and just for the record I never once considered myself a geek). Those days have since passed; and now, sadly, so has the creator of D&D; Gary Gygax.

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Gygax started out playing miniature war games such as Gettysburg. His love of science fiction and fantasy novels combined with a fascination with Medieval history led him, and his friend Don Kaye, to found the publishing company Tactical Studies Rules in 1973 and publish the first version of Dungeons & Dragons in 1974. The hand-assembled print run of 1000 copies sold out within nine months. After the death of Kaye in 1976, his widow sold her shares to Gygax. Gygax, now controlling the whole of Tactical Studies Rules, created TSR Hobbies, Inc. Unfortunately,Gygax experienced financial troubles soon after and sold TSR Hobbies to Brian Blume and his brother Kevin. The Blume family would own roughly two-thirds of TSR Hobbies by late 1976. Tactical Studies Rules published the two first printings of the original D&D and TSR Hobbies, Inc. continued on with the game.

Gygax left TSR in 1985 when changes in management created a conflict. He formed the corporation Dungeons and Dragons Entertainment which eventually led to the Dungeons & Dragons cartoon series on CBS. Later on, Gygax created Dangerous Journeys, an RPG spanning multiple genres. He began work in 1995 on a new RPG, originally intended for a computer game; however, it was released in 1999 as Lejendary Adventure. A key goal of its design was to keep the gaming rules as simple as possible, as Gygax felt that role playing games were becoming discouragingly complex to new users.

In 2005, Gygax returned to the Dungeons & Dragons RPG with his involvement in the creation of the Castles & Crusades system with Troll Lord Games. Troll Lord Games has published Castle Zagyg, the previously unreleased, original version of Gygax’s Castle Greyhawk with the original dungeon setting for D&D.

Gygax died the morning of March 4, 2008, at his home in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin at the age of 69. He was in semi-retirement, having almost suffered a heart attack after receiving incorrect medication to prevent further strokes after those on April 1 and May 4, 2004. He was diagnosed with an inoperable abdominal aortic aneurysm.

I will roll 2d10 percentile dice in your memory.

I realize that by now that’s most likely a cliché and not a really original one, but that’s never stopped me before.  I really started to take notice of this phenomenon a few weeks ago.  I was looking through a local newspaper and as I quickly leafed past the sports section, one picture caught my attention.  A picture of a fight at a hockey game; with a four sentence caption underneath that described the fight being depicted as well as mentioning other fights these two men had recently been in.  Then the other night I was over at Sandi’s and for some inexplicable reason she was watching the game (I can only guess that living in the home city of The Calgary Shames has somehow infected her mind).  I attempted to pay attention for a little while in order to possibly understand the appeal.  Less than five minutes into the game a fight started.  The commentators took the time to fill us in on the background.  Apparently these two teams had a game just a few nights previous and this fight was a carry-over from the last one.  The brawl was broken up and they started playing hockey again…for about another five minutes.  During the second fight they put up a statistic on the screen regarding fights between these two teams throughout the season.

Around this time I left the room to go play video games with the children.  It was far more satisfying to actively battle giant rats, kobolds, orcs and gelatinous cubes than it was to passively watch a hokey fight.  I eventually went back to the living room and watched the last five minutes of the game.  Amazingly there were no fights during that time (although at one point two players were nose to nose “talking” to each other.

Now I suppose there are a lot of people out there who think that these fights are “part of the game”; however since it’s my blog I’m just going to go ahead and say that you’re wrong.  I think sports games should be about the game itself.  If you want to watch and /or participate in a fight, come on down to The Redneck for our Monday Night Brawl For Y’AllGerri and Tammy are eager for some competition.