Postby ClosetOtaku » Wed Mar 05, 2008 7:15 pm
In the fall of 1977, a college student introduced a high school friend and me to the three paperback books that then constituted the core of Dungeons & Dragons. For the several years thereafter, almost all my Friday and Saturday nights were consumed with this game.
It is indeed hard to describe the impact this game had on society. Most affected, I believe, was the "geek" or "nerd" population -- before D&D, each circle of geekdom had its segment, be it collecting comics, constructing home made computers, playing chess, or reading sci fi. Afterwards, members of these segments joined over a table of paper and pencil, dice, and the ubiquitous Judge's Guild screen.
D&D brought an awareness of the subculture like no other event before -- to society as a whole, but more importantly, to the subculture itself. There was a sense of belonging brought to those who, previously, had been primarily characterized by not belonging.
I don't think Gygax foresaw that; he and Dave Arneson just made some rules designed for medieval miniatures more accessible and, wham! pent up demand in people responded. And it just kept spawning, as Omega Amen mentioned -- other RPGs, arcade and computer games, consoles, the CCG and MMORPG. Its timing, on the heels of the Tolkien revival and right before the Star Wars craze, only amplified its effects.
I had heard several weeks ago -- and have seen it repeated online -- that Gary accepted Christ late in life. I certainly hope that is the case. True or not, there is no denying that his creation, the RPG, transcended simply a new way to play games, and instead changed the way we thought about games. In some ways he even helped foster enclaves like this one, where passionate obsessives can share their interests with less fear of ostracism.
Thanks, Omega Amen, for setting up this topic. It's helped me reflect on something that has been such a significant influence in my life.
"If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world." -- C.S. Lewis