Gary Gygax, the creator of the first role-playing game
“Dungeons and Drangons”, died at his home in Lake Geneva, at the age of
sixty-nine.
According to the Associated Press, his wife informed that he
had been suffering from an inoperable abdominal aneurysm for a long time. He
was survived by his wife, as well as by his six children: three sons and three
daughters.
Despite his illnesses, Gygax was always present at game
conventions and was always happy to see people’s gratitude towards him, for
having helped them become doctors or lawyers through his work, his wife
declared, in an interview for the Associated Press.
The father of role-playing game first created the game in
1974, and it was so successful that it led to many other different products,
such as magazines, TV series and also including the computer game version, the
MMORPG Dungeons & Dragons Online: Stormreach.
An estimated 20 million people all over the world have
played the game, with more than $1 billion spent on equipment and books.
Even though almost all computers role-playing nowadays have
been inspired by the rules and settings of Gygax’s game, Gygax himself was
never a big supporter of video games, considering they didn’t require the use
of one’s imagination.
“There is no intimacy; it’s not live,” he said of online
games. “It’s being translated through a computer, and your imagination is not
there the same way it is when you’re actually together with a group of people.
It reminds me of one time where I saw some children talking about whether they
liked radio or television, and I asked one little boy why he preferred radio,
and he said, ‘Because the pictures are so much better’,” he used to say, as
reported by The New York Times.