by Gino Marinaro
People sometimes ask me how I got into gaming. When I think
about it, what they’re really asking is how it became a hobby. Well, it’s not a
long story, but here it is.
I grew up in Babbitt, MN, a small mining community on the
Iron Range. There’s no passing through Babbitt. If you do, you go to the mine.
Like any other kid, I was active, played sports, had friends, played games.
Maybe played more games than most other kids.
About the most complex game I played at that time was
“Risk.” When you get right down to it, it’s really a pretty basic game. One
unit type, not a lot of strategy, a lot of dice rolling. I played some of the
Strat-O-Matic Sports games. I found those rather interesting. They did a great
job of capturing the strategies involved in sports.
After graduating from high school, I stayed in Babbitt and
attended Vermilion Community College in Ely. Some of my friends moved away to
attend larger universities. The following summer, a couple of my friends, Rob
and Randi, came home from UND for the season. One evening, we got together, and
they introduced me to Dungeons & Dragons! That was the day that gaming
changed from being kid stuff and became a hobby! The imagination, complexities,
intricate decisions really spoke to me. Before that, I really thought that
gaming was a thing that, outside of Cribbage and other traditional card games,
was going to fade away as I got older. Not remotely!
That fall, I enrolled in St. Cloud State University. There,
I found the Games Club! A club devoted to playing games? There, I found not
just role-playing games like D&D, but a whole host of other rather advanced
board games. Civilization, Titan, Third Reich, and countless more. Then I knew
that gaming wasn’t just a hobby, but a hobby that I’d likely have for the rest
of my life.
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