Let’s move on, shall we?
Q1) 27th July saw the birth of games designer, E. Gary Gygax. In which year of the 1930s?
Q2) Gygax was the co-creator of Dungeons and Dragons. Who did he co-create the game with: Greg Stafford, Dave Arneson or Ken St. Andre?
Q3) Gygax’s company first published Dungeons and Dragons, in which year of the early 1970s: 1972, 1973 or 1974?
Q4) The original Dungeons and Dragons was a version of an earlier Gygax game: called Chainmail. Chainmail was a what: board game, wargame or video game?
Q5) Dungeons and Dragons, itself, kicked-started the popularity of what: collectible card games, tabletop role playing games or board games?
Q6) In Dungeons and Dragons, players assumed alter egos: called player characters. These player characters are known as what?
Q7) The referee who ran and organised a game of Dungeons and Dragons was referred to as a what: games master, play master or dungeon master?
Q8) In Dungeons and Dragons, both players and referee used multi-sided dice. The notation for these was in the form, XdY. X was the number of dice, Y was the number of sides on each die and the d stood for what?
Q9) Gygax set up a company called TSR, in order to publish Dungeons and Dragons. The initials stood for Tactical Studies … what?
Q10) Finally … Gygax, himself, died in 2008. Dungeons and Dragons lives on. What’s its current edition: fourth, fifth or sixth?
Q1) 26th July, 1967, saw the birth of actor, Jason Statham. He plays Bacon: in which Guy Ritchie film?
Q2) Nikephoros 1st died on 26th July, 811 AD. He was Emperor of where: Byzantium, Rome or Japan?A2) Byzantium.
Q3) What did Egypt nationalize on 26th July, 1956: the Pyramids, the Suez Canal or Luxor?
Q4) Who became the first female nominee for the post of US President: on 26th July, 2016?
Q5) Finally … the Explorer 4 probe was launched on 26th July, 1958. What was it exploring: the Moon, Earth’s radiation belt or sunspots?
“Outside of the mindless sitcoms that the networks thrive on, people able to think generally consider most entertainment is escape in one form or another.”Gary Gygax, July 27, 1938 – March 4, 2008.
‡ As a final note? My personal belief is that the modern popularity of SF and fantasy had a lot to do with Star Wars: the genres were dirt, until that film showed the entertainment industry there’s gold in them there hills. I also think that the two genres were helped — a lot — by this weird game with all the dice. I’m ALSO no video gamer: but aware there’s a whole genre of video games that owe Gygax a big Thank You. Thanks, Gary!
Thanks, Paul. Really cool! (I'm not sure Angelic Business would be your style of novel, although Debbi tells me she is enjoying the series) (Oh, yes, Frankenstein was worth watching. I think it might come back, at least to cinemas). I wonder how it would have played the other way round.
ReplyDeleteI watched a version of True West in New York with John C. Reilly and Philip Seymour Hoffman playing two brothers (one a screenwriter) and they also swapped parts every night. I saw Hoffman playing the screenwriter, that seemed the most logical choice, but I suspect it would have worked well the other way round too. (Fabulous play by Sam Shepard).
I'm off to the radio today and I have to run some errands too and catch up on some correcting. Hopefully, I'll come back tomorrow (long assignment to correct).
Take care (Not an expert but agree with your comment about Star Wars).
Agreed also about Star Wars, in terms of world popularity. But! There was the TV show "Star Trek" and, at the movies, "2001: A Space Odyssey", both of which really captivated me, at any rate. :)
ReplyDelete1. 1938
2. Dave Arneson
3. 1974
4. wargame
5. tabletop role playing games
6. PCs
7. dungeon master
8. die or dice
9. Rules
10. fifth