Gygax IP To Be Made Available For Video Games

I don't usually cover video games on this site, but this news item involves D&D co-creator Gary Gygax. Gail Gygax (Gary's wife) contacted me last week about this -- unpublished work by Gary Gygax is to be made available for video game developers to develop using a "community publishing platform" named Fig.

I don't usually cover video games on this site, but this news item involves D&D co-creator Gary Gygax. Gail Gygax (Gary's wife) contacted me last week about this -- unpublished work by Gary Gygax is to be made available for video game developers to develop using a "community publishing platform" named Fig.


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Fig describes itself thus: "Fig is a community funding and publishing platform for independent video games. Fans back games on Fig to get exclusive rewards, or invest to earn returns from game sales." To be honest, I'm not quite sure I understand it, but it kind of looks like Kickstarter but your funds are an actual investment. The press release is below.

The Gygax Trust and Community Publishing Platform Fig Collaborate to Bring Unpublished Works To Life

Unpublished Works from Famed Game Designer and Co-Creator of Dungeons & Dragons Will Be Made into Video Games Using the Fig Platform

Fig, the only community publishing platform created by gamers for gamers that offers rewards and investment-based funding, and the Gygax Trust, who owns unpublished I.P. from Gary Gygax, the famed game Designer and Co-Creator of Dungeons & Dragon, are working to develop and publish video games based on Gary’s works that formed the inspiration for creating Dungeons & Dragons. Leveraging Fig’s community publishing platform, the Gygax Trust will work with Fig to find developers for Gary’s I.P., launch Fig campaigns, and publish several titles. Additional information will be announced later this year.

“The worlds and characters to be discovered in my husband’s unpublished intellectual property are an incredibly important part of his legacy,” commented Gail Gygax.
“Therefore, it was paramount that we partner with an advanced and innovative platform such as Fig that gave us complete control of his creative vision.”

“As a gamer, I wanted to bring my father’s works to life in a medium that I enjoy. I’m looking forward to working with talented developers who love my father’s work as much as I do,” said Alex Gygax, CEO of Gygax Games.

“At Fig we already offer our partners a full channel of services without forcing them to limit their creative endeavor, from helping them find the right developers for a project, to funding, and all through the development cycle to launch. Gary’s unpublished works were some of his most cherished, shared only with his closest friends, and now we will help the Gygax family bring them to gamers,” said Justin Bailey, CEO, Fig.

Fig is democratizing video game publishing by inviting the community to financially support the development and release of games they love. Fans can back a game funding campaign on Fig to get exclusive rewards or invest in Fig Game Shares to earn returns based on game sales. Fig Game Shares are available to both accredited and non-accredited investors, in accordance with the SEC’s Regulation A+ (JOBS Act).

Each series of Fig Game Shares generate returns from the sales of individual titles. Investors can earn returns from revenue shares from Fig’s publishing operations, distribution arrangements, publisher and first party buyouts, and advances on distributions. Since its inception in August 2015, Fig has had four of the top 10 most funded video game campaigns: Obsidian’s Pillars of Eternity 2 ($4.4M), Psychonauts 2 ($3.8M), Wasteland 3 ($3.1M) and Phoenix Point ($766K).

Three Fig games have already driven positive returns for Fig investors: Fig investments related to Annapurna’s Outer Wilds (developed by Mobius Digital) more than doubled; sales from Kingdoms & Castles (developed by Lion Shield) tripled investments; and Trackless (developed by 12 East Games) and Solstice Chronicles: MIA (developed by Ironward) have generated sales, with Solstice Chronicles driving positive returns for Fig investors. In 2018, a dozen new releases will launch including the follow-up to
Obsidian’s Game of the Year title, Pillars of Eternity 2, Julian Gollop’s Phoenix Point, Make Sail, Flash Point and Solo in Q2.


Alex Gygax was interviewed by Polygon. He speaks a little about some of the available Gygax IP -- "One of the major ones that everyone knows about is his personal dungeon. It was his personal D&D campaign that he had never released to the public. He didn’t want his game nights being destroyed by publishing his work and then having his group go out and buy it and find out all of his secrets. So that’s one of the main things that we have to use, and all the little side derivatives of that.”

Alex says that "Pen and paper is a dying art. Computer games, video games, they’re the next generation, the next wave of games and I’ve always wanted to see them on that new medium and I’ve always wanted to be working with someone who’s excited as I am about it.”

Of course, the statistics from sources like ICv2 show that tabletop gaming -- and, indeed tabletop roleplaying games -- have been growing rapidly for years, not dying. Since 2013 the hobby game market has gone from $700 million to $1.4 billion, with tabletop RPGs leaping from $15 million to $45 million, a threefold growth in just the last five years.
 

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ddaley

Explorer
So Fig is like Kickstarter, but for video games? Doesn't Steam do that already?

I don't think Steam has the capability of fundraising for development of a game. Or, if it does, it isn't well advertised. Developers do sell access to games that are in alpha or beta. But, that is not the same thing.

One more thing... even though a game is funded on kickstarter or fig, they may deliver the game through Steam.
 

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Blue

Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal
Fig is like Kickstarter, but with the added potential to become an investor and get a share of the profits. But that is entirely optional.

It was what the Pillars of Eternity II was kickstarted ... er, figged ... with.
 


Ghal Maraz

Adventurer
This... thing... it looks bad from a distance.
Are there really people out there interested in investing or buying in high enough quantity a digital version of Lejendary Adventures or Castle Zygag? The Gary Gygax Trust doesn't have the rights to anything D&D related, except for a (perhaps!) workable version of Castle Greyhawk, which still can't be called with its original name.

Gail Gygax hasn't been able to accomplish anything with the monument (except suing the other branch of the family out of anything with the Gygax name on it), while Alex hasn't any particular previous entrepreneurial experience, as far as I can tell.
 

While I’d love to see this come to fruition, I’ve little faith that we’ll see anything. So far, the only tangible thing the Gygax Trust has done is to take rights away from companies, so less of Gygax’s legacy is out there for people. And of course, there’s the separate-ish Memorial Fund’s statue that’s still nowhere to be seen.

As for pen and paper gaming dying out, that does seem an out-of-touch response, considering the resurgence of tabletop gaming.
 

"Video killed the radio stars".

I thought videogames would kill the board games, but I was wrong and now these are living a new golden age.

The characters files by paper will be replaced by tabletops, and this isn't bad, but the true fanboys will want paper books for their collections.

Videogames are a good doors to get new fans, but they get old too fast. Today selling a pdf of a RPG from 80's or 90's years is easier than a videogame of this same epoch.
 

Gradine

The Elephant in the Room (she/her)
I mean, I for one am excited about this prospect, but then I tend to be a video gamer first, tabletop gamer second. Obviously the bit about Pen & Paper dying out is way out of touch and has been for at least several years, but it's not wrong to assert that the opportunities for independent computer game development have also exploded exponentially, and Fig seems to be a platform that is working quite well so far. So, yeah, I think I'm definitely excited to see what comes from this.
 


Flexor the Mighty!

18/100 Strength!
So the video game market is crying out for the works of Gygax? I doubt that. Sure an amazing game that stands out from the pack has a good chance but I get the feeling that Gail and Alex Gygax think that Gary's IP is just pure gold. Sorry but I don't think it is outside the RPG community, and especially the older generation of gamers. And really outside of Castle Greyhawk what are those gamers clamoring for? A VG version of Legendary Adventures? Really? This will go nowhere and is honestly just sad to see how she has badly mishandled Gary's gaming legacy. I would have been fine with the Castle Zygag coming out and giving us a version of that legendary dungeon but this? Bummer.
 


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