Adventure Games

Adventure Games was an American game company that produced role-playing games and game supplements.

History

In the early 1980s Dave Arneson established his own game company, Adventure Games – staffed largely by Arneson's friends, most of whom were also members of a Civil War reenactment group – that produced the miniatures games Harpoon (1981) and Johnny Reb (1983), as well as a new edition of his own Adventures in Fantasy role-playing game (1981).[1]:39[2] The company also put out about a half-dozen Tékumel related books, due to Arneson's friendship with M. A. R. Barker.[1]:39 Adventure Games was profitable, but Arneson found the workload to be excessive and finally sold the company to Flying Buffalo.[3] Flying Buffalo picked up the rights to Adventure Games in 1985; because Arneson owned a portion of Flying Buffalo, he let them take care of the rest of the company's stock and IP when he shut the company down.[1]:39

gollark: It unloads the model sometimes and then it takes ages to ununload.
gollark: I have investigated purchasing a GPU, but the only ones available at usable costs are actually quite bad.
gollark: Such as the experimental_qa one.
gollark: I only have access to small amounts of RAM/CPU and no GPU on my server, so unfortunately I can only run small underpowered machine learning cuboids™.
gollark: You can run equivalents to small GPT-3 on your own hardware, if your own hardware happens to have several tens of gigabytes of VRAM.

References

  1. Shannon Appelcline (2011). Designers & Dragons. Mongoose Publishing. ISBN 978-1-907702-58-7.
  2. Varney, Allen (July 1998). "Profiles: Dave Arneson". Dragon. Renton, Washington: Wizards of the Coast (#249): 120.
  3. Sacco, Ciro Allessandro. "An Interview with Dave Arneson". Archived from the original on July 7, 2004. Retrieved June 3, 2009. (Alternative URL: .)
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