ATTN: Ben Riggs RE: The "Gygax Talk". A widely shared quote about Gary Gygax is being presented without context—and the full historical record tells a very different story.
This is NOT my video.
Every "my" written below is from the information below the YouTube video:
A widely shared quote about Gary Gygax is being presented without context—and the full historical record tells a very different story. This video examines the original sources behind claims amplified by Ben Riggs and asks whether the narrative holds up under scrutiny.
This ZIP file contains all known excerpts submitted by Gary Gygax in available issues of Europa. It also includes my full research in PDF format, along with a complete transcript of Lady X’s letter.
My Research: https://atenhotep.itch.io/gygax-resea...
Europa fan-zine: https://archive.org/details/@hanjukim...
This video began as a simple look at an authentic 1972 printing of Chainmail, the precursor to Dungeons & Dragons. It became something else entirely: an investigation into how a single quote—removed from its context—has been used to shape a lasting narrative about Gary Gygax.
The central issue is not whether the quote exists—it does. The issue is how it has been presented. When examined in its original setting within the Europa fanzine (1975), alongside the surrounding letters, timeline, and circumstances, the meaning changes substantially. This video presents that missing context in full.
Key areas covered include:
The Europa fanzine and why it was not an interview source
The “Lady X” letter and its role in provoking Gygax’s response
The broader discussion about women in wargaming during that period
Claims that Gygax “wrote misogyny into the rules” and how those claims compare to the actual texts Misinterpretations of AD&D mechanics, including Strength limits and probability
The use of mythological sources (e.g., Tiamat and Bahamut) and whether those choices reflect intent or adaptation
This video also addresses a larger question: what responsibility does a historian—or anyone presenting historical claims—have to context, accuracy, and completeness? When key details are omitted, does the resulting narrative still qualify as responsible scholarship?
All primary sources referenced in this video are provided below, including:
A full archive of the Europa fanzine issues A compiled research folder containing all cited material
Some context would be nice for this post. What is this "widely shared" quote? Is there some controversy I've missed?
I'm not super motivated to go watch YouTube videos, especially something introduced with this kind of framing. Also, the "research" links are broken when I try to follow them.
I'm somewhat interested in the origins of RPGs -- I've heard stories about playing D&D in the 70s from a couple of buddies -- but something about this video description has me feeling cautious.
When I copied it from YouTube, it truncated the links. The links should work now, and if they don't go to his video and click the links in the video description.
https://www.amazon.com/Slaying-Dragon-History-Dungeons-Dragons/dp/125027804X
https://x.com/BenRiggs_
https://www.writerbenriggs.com/blog/4h8ich5klfw83ehgcxamqko6u1yrg7
https://ttrpg.network/post/7946579
https://www.enworld.org/threads/d-d-historian-benn-riggs-on-gary-gygax-sexism.705192/
Thank you!