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  • WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 22 2006 12:00 PM

Wil Wheaton's Geek In Review: Living the Dream at So-Cal Gen Con

Of all the things I do that make me a geek, nothing brings me as much joy, or has eaten up as much of my not-as-disposable-as-it-once-was income as gaming. In fact, in my teens, while a lot of my peers were busy trying to fit in and be cool, I was painting 40K figures, designing Division 20 vehicles for Car Wars, and making back room deals in Diplomacy.

But as I've grown older, and taken on more adult responsibilities, finding time to game with my friends (who have also have mortgages and families of their own) has become really, really hard. Finding time to go to a convention? I may as well find time to build and pilot a rocket ship to the moon.

But this past weekend, when I discovered that the Southern California incarnation of the mother of all gaming conventions, Gen Con, was happening in Anaheim, I came up with a fiendish plan to spend the day there on Saturday: I'd play some games, surround myself with geeks, and write about it for the Geek in Review.

I believe this is called "living the dream" . . .

After I picked up my badge, I wandered around for a few minutes, stunned at the volume of collectible card game players. There were hundreds of them, mostly pre-teens playing Yu-Gi-Oh!, occupying about a third of the entire convention floor. Was this what the whole con was going to be? Had CCGs taken over gaming? Not entirely, I realized, as I passed an area of networked computers, where teens played CounterStrike, and World of WarCraft. Just down the hall from them, other teens played Xbox and PS3 games. I pulled out my notebook and wrote, "Things have changed. The cut-out turning key for Deluxe Car Wars is no longer state-of-the-art. The Wheel of Time keeps turning."

So-Cal Gen Con was in a huge hall at the Anaheim Convention Center. It was harshly-lit, and felt cold and cavernous, more like Comic Con than the more intimate gaming cons I remembered as a teenager. I felt intimidated, and wondered if it had been a mistake to come.

I kept walking, and looked for the exhibitor's area. This was always my favorite part of the con, where I can get demos of new games, maybe pick up a nerdy T-shirt or two, or find an out-of-print sourcebook that the completist in me simply must have. (Because, you know, it really makes sense for me to buy GURPS Humanx. I may need it for that Steampunk/Supers/Horror/Humanx campaign that everyone's been dying to play for the last, well, never.)

I stopped at a T-shirt booth, and laughed really hard at an "Arkham Ambulance and Catering" design. I made my save vs. "I really want it" roll (+5, for Fear of Wife's Wrath) and moved on. Just past the end of the aisle, I happened upon a booth where a vaguely familiar game was about to be demoed. It looked like one I'd played before, but something wasn't right.

"Is that Kill Doctor Lucky?" I said.

"Yes, it is," the guy running the demo said. "Have you played it before?"

"I have," I said, "but seeing it in color, with its own pieces and in a strong large box that could actually withstand some abuse is a little . . . well, actually, it's a lot disturbing."[1]

He laughed. "Would you like to play a demo?"

"Yes. Yes I would." I pulled out a chair, sat down, and the con truly began for me. I was gaming, and nothing else mattered in the world. For the next twenty minutes or so, did my best to kill Doctor Lucky, which I managed to eventually do, cracking jokes and befriending the other players as we played. I was in my element, back among the nerds, and I was as happy as I'd been in weeks.

When I finished, I got a copy of the new version of Kill Doctor Lucky, walked down the aisle, and stopped to admire some impressive (and expensive) armor and weapons. While I looked at a replica sword from Lord of the Rings, a guy tapped me on the shoulder.

"I don't want to make a scene," he said, "but I wanted to tell you how cool I think it is that you're a gamer."

I smiled. "Thank you, man," I said.

"I don't want to bother you, but I just wanted to say hello, and I love your blog. Have a good time." He vanished into the crowd before I could say anything else. Before I could move, another guy walked up to me, and told me how much he and his wife liked Star Trek, and that he didn't understand why people gave me such a hard time about my character. What a change it was from the last time I was at a gaming con eighteen years ago, when I was surrounded by "Kill Wesley" stickers and buttons, and a lot of my fellow gamers thought it was really neat to be so cruel to me, I left games after just a few turns. (Okay, so not all progress is bad.)

For the next two hours, I slowly wandered the exhibitor's area, stopping to check out new games, fondly looking over old ones, and making several "save vs. I want it" rolls. Eventually, I decided to head out of the convention center to a hotel across the parking lot, where a bunch of movies were being screened. I wanted to see a mockumentary about Star Wars nerds called A Great Disturbance.

On my way, I got lost. I found myself upstairs in the convention center, where some brilliant convention center management people had booked a loud, evangelical revival for Spanish teenagers across the hall from the rooms where most of the RPG's were set up. It reminded me of that old Far Side where the day care is built next to the dingo farm, and the caption reads, "Trouble brewing."

I walked back downstairs, and across the parking lot to the hotel, where I got lost again. This time, I found myself in some sort of holiday purse sale on the second floor, then at the Council on Indian Medicine's annual meeting on the third floor. I went back to the lobby, where I found a guy wearing a Gen Con badge.

"Do you know where the movies are?" I said.

Not only did he not know, he only spoke German. At this point, I began to laugh so hard at my predicament, it attracted the attention of a passing group of gamers.

"Hey," I said. "Do you know where the movies are?"

"Yeah," one of them said. "It's across the street."

He pointed out the door, and across the street, where a steady stream of geeks in capes, pirate outfits, trench coats, and various sci-fi costumes moved like a trail of ants from the convention center into a different hotel.

"Ah," I said. "I went to the wrong hotel. Thanks!"

I made my way over to the correct hotel, and finally felt like I was at one of the cons I remember. It was intimate, dimly-lit, and packed with people in costumes, people playing games, people napping on couches, and people doing the things that geeks do. I passed one guy gloating into his cell phone, "So, I guess you're not picking up your phone after that humiliating defeat?" He was cleaning up the aftermath of a Magic: The Gathering duel. A pair of men passed me, heavily engaged in conversation. One of them said to the other, "Not only is it a valid thought, it's a valid line of discussion!" I have no idea what they were talking about, but it certainly seemed, uh, valid to them. Four teenagers (two boys and two girls) walked in front of me as I crossed the lobby, one wearing a Cthulhu backpack. All of them were dressed in black pants, the boys with the obligatory flannel shirts unbuttoned over their T-shirts.

"Wait," one of the boys said to one of the girls. "You got up at seven?"

"Yeah," she said. "I had to, so I could take a shower."

The boys barked out the geek laugh, the one that is sort of like a cough and an airhorn.

"What? Don't you get up to shower in the morning?" She said.

"No way, man!" The boy said. "I just get up and go!"

Walking behind them, I could confirm this fact.

They went left, toward the elevators, and I went right, toward the True Dungeon[2] and the screening rooms, where I discovered that I'd missed the movie. So instead of A Great Disturbance, I ended up watching The Gamers: Dorkness Rising in the room next door. The movie is hilarious, and if you know why it's funny for a Bard to have twenty ranks in seduction, you'll love it. Imagine watching Waiting for Guffman with community theater nerds who all have a sense of humor about themselves, and you'll know what it was like to watch this film, about gamers in a d20 adventure, surrounded by gamers who just came from playing a d20 adventure.

When the movie ended, I walked back to the convention center, but there really wasn't anything left to see. I took a few pictures, bought a couple of new games, and made plans to attend for more than just one day next year, and maybe even do something I've never done, and travel to a convention for fun, instead of work.

Throughout the day a lot of people stopped and talked to me. They all had kind things to say about my blog, my books, even the column I briefly wrote for Dungeon magazine in 2005.[3] I realized that their kindness, their camaraderie, and the feeling of acceptance I got when talking with them is a huge part of why I love gaming, and why I miss gaming with my friends so much now.

Games are more than just rolling polyhedral dice and shouting, "Huzzah!" The games we play are an excuse to get together and escape the mundane reality of our daily lives. When we play RPGs, we make up a story together where we're heroes, our kids don't talk back, and we don't have to sit in traffic. When we play a miniature wargame, we're just recreating the games we played with green plastic army men when we were young, only this time we have bolt guns and blast templates. Whatever we play, it's more than just a game: it's quoting movies and giving each other shit and debating the best Batman actor (Michael Keaton), the worst Batman film (Batman and Robin), the best Lord of the Rings (Two Towers Super Extendo-Director's-Cut version) and the inevitable Star Wars argument. It's talking about our kids and hoping that they grow up at least Neutral Good. It's about making time to do something we love. Some people play softball on the weekends; we play Settlers of Catan. In the end, the result is the same: we all end up drunk and happy, with scrapes on our elbows that we can't explain.

Gen Con's website says, "Thousands of gaming enthusiasts gather together and celebrate 96 hours of what we do best: Play hard. Create worlds. Think brilliantly. Be our heroes. Be ourselves." I love that. If you're a geek, and you've never been to a con, I highly recommend making it a priority to attend one before you're too buried by responsibility to really blow off everything and just play games, watch movies, and wear a Storm Trooper costume without anyone looking at you like you're insane. Gamers should check out Gen Con Indy, Gen Con So-Cal, Kubla Con, or any of the Strategicons. Non-gamers or multi-class gamers who have one or more ranks in Sci-Fi may like Penguicon, Linucon, or LosCon. These are places where it's not just acceptable to embrace your inner geek, it's required.

But take a big Bag of Holding; you're not going to make all those save vs. "I want it" rolls, and you'll need a place to put your loot. Trust me, I'm the voice of experience on this one.

Wil Wheaton has this great Steampunk/Supers/Horror/Humanx campaign ready to go, if anyone is interested. Or we could just play Devil Bunny Wants A Ham.

[1] For the non-gamers or proto-gamers in the audience: Kill Dr. Lucky is published by Cheapass Games, a wonderful little company who made a name for themselves releasing fun games without any pieces. They figured that you already had a lot of pieces from other games, so by just shipping the rules, and simple black-and-white boards and cards, they could sell them for less. Hence the name Cheapass. They have won a pile of awards, and publish some of my favorite games of all-time, including the aforementioned Kill Doctor Lucky, and the cardgame Gimmie The Brain.

[2] True Dungeon is a d20 variant that is like Live Action Role Playing, but totally not lame. I've done it once, where I was killed by a giant spider. I didn't do it this year, because I didn't have any friends with me, and lost my nerve to join an adventuring party by myself.

[3] The column was short-lived because I wrote about more than just D&D (sort of like what I do here,) and a lot of readers decided to hate whatever I wrote, because I played Wesley Crusher on Star Trek nineteen years ago. They wrote lots of letters, sent lots of e-mails, and spent a lot of time and energy freaking out in message forums. Ultimately, it just wasn't worth the headache, and we ended it after less than a year.

 

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Comments
envie

envie

Berkeley, CA
August 2006

NOV 23, 2006 01:44 PM

I also highly recommend the Penny Arcade Expo. It's a FANTASTIC gaming convention in Seattle that's been going on for 3 years so far and doubling in attendance every year because it's so good at being about gamers getting together.

BurningKrome

BurningKrome

San Jose, CA
April 2005

NOV 23, 2006 02:58 PM

Alas, the demise of MosCon. But, when you get down, just remember...

Cthulhu loathes you!

IKCSmiley

ikcsmiley

Asheville, NC
July 2003

NOV 23, 2006 09:13 PM

Excellent article - just letting you know you were part of my friends' gaming past:


Dual classification and high cunning made you a good addition to Federation decks biggrin

GenghisX

GenghisX

Atlanta, GA
March 2005

NOV 24, 2006 02:31 AM


Wil Wheaton has this great Steampunk/Supers/Horror/Humanx campaign ready to go, if anyone is interested. Or we could just play Devil Bunny Wants A Ham.



Devil Bunny doesn't want a ham..Devil Bunny Needs A Ham! I've heard he hates the earth, too. biggrin

Cheapass Games and Looney Labs always get a lot of my time whenever I make it to a con now.

Remj

Remj

Seattle, WA
April 2003

NOV 24, 2006 04:51 PM

I couldn't make it to Indy or SoCal this year. I even had a free pass for the ad I was in. (Hmmm....got dissed by my fellow gamers for it. That makes good company.)

SoCal is a tough hit. Indy (formerly Milwaukee) has been around for a long time...getting enough attendance for SoCal to become a tradition could be rough. There has to be enough stuff going on to get attendance, so you can get exhibitors, so you can get more attendance.

Thanks for the con report!

ASSH0LE

ASSH0LE

Las Vegas, NV
June 2003

NOV 25, 2006 08:56 PM

Wil, you are DEAD WRONG about "Batman and Robin."

Batman: [reading a riddle] What has yellow skin and writes?
Robin: A ball-point banana!
Batman: [reads the second riddle] What people are always in a hurry?
Robin: Rushing people... Russians!
Batman: So this means...
Robin: Someone Russian is going to slip on a banana and break their neck!
Batman: Precisely, Robin!



Oh wait, that was "Batman," wasn't it? I always called the show Batman and Robin when I was a kid. The movie is worth owning. If only for the classic lines like:

"Batman: Some days you just can't get rid of a bomb! "
"Catwoman: Marry me, Batman!
Batman: But what about Robin?"
"Batman: Bon Voyage, Pussy"

Kleio

Kleio

Winona, MN
January 2006

NOV 25, 2006 09:13 PM

ASSH0LE said:
Wil, you are DEAD WRONG about "Batman and Robin."

Batman: [reading a riddle] What has yellow skin and writes?
Robin: A ball-point banana!
Batman: [reads the second riddle] What people are always in a hurry?
Robin: Rushing people... Russians!
Batman: So this means...
Robin: Someone Russian is going to slip on a banana and break their neck!
Batman: Precisely, Robin!



Oh wait, that was "Batman," wasn't it? I always called the show Batman and Robin when I was a kid. The movie is worth owning. If only for the classic lines like:

"Batman: Some days you just can't get rid of a bomb! "
"Catwoman: Marry me, Batman!
Batman: But what about Robin?"
"Batman: Bon Voyage, Pussy"



What sits in a tree and is dangerous?

A sparrow with a machine gun!!

It's lines like that that always made me expect Batman to just smack Robin upside the head and shout, "Quit fucking around! People's LIVES are at stake, you little shit!"

DrVenture

DrVenture

Chandler, AZ
June 2004

NOV 25, 2006 09:54 PM

Went to SoCal myself, helping to run a booth, which cut down on gaming time, to be sure. I first went when... let's say when ST: TNG had just started. And I was playing lots of Car Wars!

For some reason, I'm reminded of a list of "Ways to Kill Wesley Crusher" someone had left on a flier table and invited people to add to. "Drop him in the Neutral Zone in a pod marked 'Romulans suck!'" comes to mind. Never understood all the rancor... don't like, then don't watch.

It was a fun con, but a bit thin in the dealer's room.

malkav11

malkav11

Saint Paul, MN
July 2003

NOV 26, 2006 11:08 PM

Yeah, dunno, never was particularly bothered by Wesley when I still watched the show. These days I'm not particularly impressed by Trek, but it still geeks me out that you're an editor here, much less a gamer. Go figure.

I always wanted to go to GenCon but it was several hours away when it was in Wisconsin and I couldn't convince my parents to take me (they aren't gamers). And now that I could probably have arranged to go at least once, it's in Indy (and SoCal) and those are completely out of the question. *sighs*

Still, I hit up Con of the North most years (the local gaming con. The only local gaming con, as far as I know.). While I can play board and card games on a mostly weekly basis, it's a lot tougher to get any sort of roleplaying going because of the regular attendance required and the considerably smaller pool of people who're interested. Plus finding a GM...man. I generally have had to run things myself, and, y'know...it's not something I dislike...but I'd rather be a player. So Con of the North provides that opportunity.

I sometimes also play nonroleplaying games that I wouldn't otherwise get to play. I particularly liked a session last year where we got to play Steve Jackson Games' "Hacker", complete with the expansion and I believe a few house rules. It's a game that I like very much but I can't seem to get my usual group(s) to play. And what made that session particularly fine was that the guy running it had thought to provide an extra touch of ambiance: cases of Jolt cola and Bawls, free for the players and plenty of both.

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