Now that I’ve gotten over my initial impulse regarding any death (respectful nothings and maybe a joke to briefly dismiss the lingering fear of one’s own mortality), I wanted to write a little more about Gary Gygax passing.
When I was fifteen, I got kicked out of UTS, a private school in downtown Toronto. UTS was a school for the gifted of the gifted, the really, really smart kids. It was the best thing, in retrospect, that I did get kicked out, because I wasn’t popular and it wasn’t conducive to my mental health for me to be there. But at the time, it was devastating. I already “knew” I wasn’t likeable or cool; now, worse, I was being told by authority that I wasn’t smart, and if I didn’t have that then what did I have?
I’d picked up gaming while there, because gamers will more often than not tolerate people they don’t like in order to have a full round of players. (Some like to delude themselves into thinking this makes them more tolerant. It doesn’t, particularly, but everybody has their little, mostly harmless illusions.) I spent that summer reading guidebooks and feeling desperately lonely and absolutely terrified of transferring to public high school, where I didn’t know anybody and was convinced everybody was cooler than me.
I barely talked to anybody the first week I was there, but on my first Friday there, in my morning chemistry class, a couple of the burnouts in the back row who were already on the no-university-for-you track (partially by their own choice, partially not – this is almost always the case) were talking about their recently started up D&D campaign, and how they’d had this hell of a time with a kobold tribe their DM had thrown with them, and come on, kobolds? I said aloud, almost involuntarily, “wait, he threw a Tucker’s Kobolds at you?” [1]
And that was how I got into another D&D campaign, and made friends when I really needed them. [2] And the important thing to understand is that my experience is the furthest thing from unique. What Gary Gygax – along with the other patron saints of nerddom, your Roddenberrys and Lucases and Stans-and-Jacks – did was to give the nerds and burnouts and outcasts their very own lingua franca, their own culture. Even though the paper RPG market is diminishing with every year, a market of late-thirtysomethings not replacing themselves with younger players, it lives on in a thousand thousand iterations: World of Warcraft is just the most obvious, but they’re everywhere.
And I just wanted to thank him for that.
[1] Someone once said “girls can smell D&D on you twenty years later.” It’s true, but I’ve long since made my peace with it.
[2] To young high-school nerds reading this: the burnouts are your natural allies. They need smart friends and you need streetwise friends. The show wasn’t called Freaks and Geeks for nothing.
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The passing of Gary Gygax has affected my whole family. My parents were D&D players in their younger days, and as a child I found their manuals and was quite the RP nerd myself. I have fond memories of reading the Monster Manual and their character sheets, and hearing them recount their adventures. Hell, D&D is one of those ways I can stay connected to my Dad, who died a couple years ago. Mom and I are quite saddened by his passing – he changed the way we see world in a tiny way and it’s still causing ripples.
That said, while us girls CAN smell D&D on you, if you find a fellow player, it is a rather enticing smell. (Just never date the GM. It just makes things complicated.)
That was a really nice post. I’ve never played D&D, but I am kind of intrigued by the phenomenon (in high school my friends and I read Harry Potter…)
Being quite the odd girl out I never had any friends in elementary school. I lived in the countryside, so I had them around my house, and of different ages so we were never in the same class.
When I joined high school in a different city I got the first chance to reinvent myself, and I thought I’d try to stop being the odd, nerdy girl who sat in a corner reading weird books. It worked alright, but still no friends. The second semester the school was suddenly plastered with weird, exceedingly violent posters (from Hardboiled (the comic) actually) with nothing but a place and a time on them. I got curious, showed up (I was the ONLY one that did) and found myself immersed in a gaming group finding my first real friends ever (one of them is still my best friend).
So yes, thank you Gary Gygax, my life would be a whole lot more sad without you.
Nice. Tucker’s Kobolds AND a Freaks & Geeks shout-out. Doubly apt considering the finale ends with a D&D game…
I could not agree more. As a nerd in high school (although more of an “artsy” nerd) the burnouts made amazing friends, and were a needed change from the obsession with grades and overbearing parents.
My mother always hated ( I must stress this… “HATED”) AD&D, She actually forbid me from playing it… Like that worked… However, I will admit, I wasted way too much time studying the rules and Monster Manuals than I did my school work (but I made lifelong friends, and had LOADS more fun). Thanks to all the former TSR gang (they are all Missed) but in particular, Master Gygax… My eternal thanks.
-Eddy
[…] on this, mainly because every nerd in the universe already has a blog post up about it (and then a few more. Hell, my mom told me on the phone the other night. And nothing against my mom, but when she’s […]
I love the smell of DnD in the morning…smells like…cheetos and dirty laundry?
I owe Mr. Gygax some of the best nights of my college career. DnD is also how I met my boyfriend! He was an elf cleric from the dessert, our eyes met across the crowded tavern, he killed a berserk elemental, the usual girl-meets-boy story.