The Gamers (film)

The Gamers is a 2002 film written and directed by Matt Vancil and produced by independent movie company Dead Gentlemen Productions. It is an affectionate spoof of role-playing games, and often shown at gaming conventions. A sequel entitled The Gamers: Dorkness Rising was set to be released in 2006, but was delayed due to problems finding a distributor; it was eventually released on DVD in August 2008 at conventions and online.

The Gamers
Directed byMatt Vancil
Produced byVarious
Written byMatt Vancil
StarringMatt Cameron
Chris Duppenthaler
Justin McGregor
Emily Olson
Phil M. Price
Nathan Rice
Music byBen Dobyns
Phil M. Price
Edited byBen Dobyns
Distributed byDead Gentlemen Productions
Running time
48 mins
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1000

A second sequel The Gamers: Hands of Fate was funded via Kickstarter[1] and its extended cut is as of GenCon 2013 revealed in segments via YouTube[2]

Plot

The movie flips between following a group of gamers in a dorm immersed in a role-playing game, and their characters (played by the same actors) as they journey through a world of fantasy and wonder to defeat a being known as "The Shadow" and rescue a princess. The latter is theoretically a heroic quest, but while the game master attempts to foster in a narrative, the players tend to be more interested in their characters' tolerance for ale, trying to apply the sneak attack damage multiplier to siege weaponry, et cetera.

The movie both makes fun of gamer stereotypes and plays the discrepancy between an optimal RPG plot and the events of an actual RPG session for maximum absurdity. Characters attempting something dangerous freeze as dice clatter in the distance. The party thief picks the pocket of a bystander, then steals that bystander's pants—not because he wants the pants in any way, but solely to see if his skill statistics allow it. One character, while present, does not interact with the others for most of the game, as his player is absent. When an unlucky dice roll causes the death of one character, the other players' characters mourn him for a moment, and then immediately start squabbling over the items he was carrying. Characters spring to action, then keel over as their players forget and are reminded that the characters are asleep, players argue and make snack runs, and their game is frequently interrupted by a girl from the same dorm who demands they keep quiet so that she can study.

The Shadow is eventually defeated, after a long quest, and the characters find themselves in a strange tunnel. On the other side of the door, they hear voices—the voices of their players, who are narrating the action in the hallway outside. Bursting into the room (as dictated by the players), the characters slaughter the gamers, then begin picking over the room for treasure. They discover that their entire adventure has been documented by the "strange sorcerers" they have just slain via their character sheets. In the midst of these revelations, the "Princess" (the girl who needs to study and is constantly interrupted by the gamers' noise) bursts in and reads them the riot act, thinking their outfits to be mere costumes; after she leaves, the adventurers seem quite stunned that their beloved Princess has such a foul mouth and temper.

Sequels and spin-offs

In 2013 Zombie Orpheus Entertainment in cooperation with Dead Gentlemen Productions and Lynnvander Inc produced two mini miniseries, Natural One and Humans & Households, set in the Gamers universe. Both series mirror the structure of "The Gamers" by showing both players of a roleplaying game and the fictitious characters they are playing.

Natural One features the characters Leo and Gary (both are main characters in Dorkness Rising and Hands of Fate). The plot revolves around Monica, Gary's sister, who wants to marry her fiancé, Ryan. However, since Ryan is not a geek and an old agreement between Gary and Monica states that both of them may only marry geeks, Ryan has to prove his geekiness by beating a roleplaying game scenario before Gary gives his blessing to the wedding. The fictitious roleplaying game featured in the film is an homage to the popular cyberpunk roleplaying game Shadowrun.

Humans & Households (the title is a reference to Dungeons & Dragons) turns the concept of The Gamers on its head: Characters in the fantasy world of The Gamers play a roleplaying game set in our world.

In April 2015, a web series continuation of the plot of The Gamers was announced. It will lead directly into the events of the next movie in the series and will chronicle exploits of the protagonists' characters who are now lost in the modern world. The project was be funded via Kickstarter, much like The Gamers: Hands of Fate.[3] The first installment of the series dubbed The Shadow Menace was released in August 2017.

gollark: I mean, it sort of kind of does.
gollark: And faster doesn't mean smarter either.
gollark: We don't know how most of it works yet.
gollark: It's not like you can just magically wire brains into a computer and have them run 1928571298 times faster.
gollark: I don't see why you would want that.

References

  1. The Gamers: Hands of Fate by Zombie Orpheus, Kickstarter, retrieved July 24, 2013
  2. Zombie Orpheus Entertainment - YouTube Channel, Zombie Orpheus Entertainment, retrieved October 1, 2013
  3. Pilot Season by Zombie Orpheus, Zombie Orpheus Entertainment, retrieved April 17, 2015
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