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  1. May 13, 2019 · David Lance Arneson was a game designer from St. Paul who collaborated with Ernest Gary Gygax to publish the famous tabletop roleplaying game Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) in 1974. Although the D&D ...

  2. Nov 2, 2015 · Co-created by Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson, in 1974, D. & D. had gone from a heavily leveraged first printing of a thousand hand-assembled copies—stored, at first in a colleague’s basement—to ...

    • Wargaming
    • Chainmail and Blackmoor
    • Dungeons & Dragons
    • Advanced Dungeons & Dragons
    • The Founders’ Legacy

    Dungeons & Dragons is descended from tactical military simulations, historically known as wargames. Wargaming has a long history in Europe and America, dating back to tactical drills played by military officers to train soldiers as strategists in the 17th century, and the wargaming hobby was introduced to the United States in 1953 when Charles Robe...

    Gygax and Arneson first met in Lake Geneva at the second Gen Con in 1969, and their friendship led to the creation of Don’t Give up the Ship in 1971, a naval wargame based on rules they had created to expand Wesely’s own land-based Napoleonic wargames. Between Gygax and Arneson’s meeting in ’69 and their first publication in ’71, Gygax worked on ot...

    In order to publish Dungeons & Dragons—the name Gygax and Arneson finally settled upon for their fantasy game—Gary Gygax and his childhood friend Don Kaye threw their last bits of cash into forming a company called Tactical Studies Rules, or TSR, in order to publish their ambitious game. It was at this point that Dave Arneson began drift apart from...

    TSR released a new edition of Dungeons & Dragons in 1977. In fact, two new editions were being created at once. One was J. Eric Holmes’s Dungeons & Dragons Basic Set, which was essentially a cohesive and unified revision of the game created by Gygax and Arneson. The second, known as Advanced Dungeons & Dragons (AD&D), was produced by Gygax himself....

    TSR ultimately crumbled under the weight of its debts in 1997, and its pieces were picked up by Wizards of the Coast—then known primarily for publishing card games like Pokémon and Magic: the Gathering. Gygax’s AD&D was published under the TSR logo for three more years, until Wizards dropped the TSR logo (as well as the “Advanced” moniker) for good...

    • James Haeck
  3. Jun 5, 2022 · DavidLance"Dave" Arneson. Born 1 Oct 1947 in Hennepin, Minnesota, United States. Son of [father unknown] and Lois Maxine (Vandiver) Arneson. [sibling (s) unknown] Husband of Frankie Ann (Morneau) Arneson — married [date unknown] [location unknown] [children unknown] Died 7 Apr 2009 at age 61 in Saint Paul, Ramsey, Minnesota, United States.

    • Male
    • October 1, 1947
    • Frankie Ann (Morneau) Arneson
    • April 7, 2009
  4. CC BY-SA2.0. David Lance Arneson was a game designer from St. Paul who collaborated with Ernest Gary Gygax to publish the famous tabletop roleplaying game Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) in 1974. Although the D&D property changed hands in 1997, and the game’s mechanics have evolved, its core wouldn’t be what it is today without Dave Arneson.

  5. Apr 7, 2009 · David L. Arneson (born October 1, 1947 in Minnesota, United States, Died April 7, 2009) was a US game designer. In the early 1970s, he co-created the Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) role-playing game with Gary Gygax. He is a University of Minnesota alumnus, and began working on role-playing games (RPGs) at Coffman Union. He has kept a relatively low profile and has been called an "unsung legend" in ...

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  7. Apr 11, 2009 · By Seth Schiesel. April 10, 2009. Dave Arneson, who through the popular game he helped create, Dungeons & Dragons, spawned a new form of interpersonal entertainment that has captivated millions ...

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