Hall of Fame Games and Publications
- Ace of Aces
- Acquire
- Advanced Dungeons & Dragons
- Amber Diceless Roleplaying
- Axis & Allies
- Battletech Mechs & Vehicles
- Berg's Review of Games
- Call of Cthulhu
- Champions
- Chivalry & Sorcery
- Cosmic Encounter
- The Courier
- Diplomacy
- Dragon Magazine
- Dungeons & Dragons
- Empire
- Fire & Movement Magazine
- GURPS
- Illuminati play-by-mail game
- Mage Knight
- Magic: The Gathering
- Middle-earth play-by-mail game
- Mythos
- Nuclear War
- Paranoia
- Risk
- The Settlers of Catan
- Squad Leader
- Star Fleet Battles
- Strategy & Tactics
- Traveller
- TwixT
- Vampire: The Masquerade
- Starcraft
- Warhammer Fantasy Battle
- Warhammer 40000
Dungeons & Dragons and Advanced Dungeons & Dragons were deemed different enough to be inducted on separate occasions.
Read more about this topic: Origins Award
Famous quotes containing the words hall, fame, games and/or publications:
“Having children can smooth the relationship, too. Mother and daughter are now equals. That is hard to imagine, even harder to accept, for among other things, it means realizing that your own mother felt this way, toounsure of herself, weak in the knees, terrified about what in the world to do with you. It means accepting that she was tired, inept, sometimes stupid; that she, too, sat in the dark at 2:00 A.M. with a child shrieking across the hall and no clue to the childs trouble.”
—Anna Quindlen (20th century)
“It is remarkable that the dead lie everywhere under stones.... Why should the monument be so much more enduring than the fame which it is designed to perpetuate,a stone to a bone? Here lies,MHere lies;Mwhy do they not sometimes write, There rises? Is it a monument to the body only that is intended?”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“Whatever games are played with us, we must play no games with ourselves, but deal in our privacy with the last honesty and truth.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)
“Dr. Calder [a Unitarian minister] said of Dr. [Samuel] Johnson on the publications of Boswell and Mrs. Piozzi, that he was like Actaeon, torn to pieces by his own pack.”
—Horace Walpole (17171797)