Tom Dalgliesh
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2018}}
{{Use British English|date=February 2018}}
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|occupation = Game designer
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Tom Dalgliesh is the owner of Columbia Games and a designer of many wargames and fantasy role-playing materials.
Biography
Dalgliesh began his career in games by playing poker while working as a midshipman serving in the British Merchant Navy, before he emigrated to Canada in 1967.{{Cite book | contribution=Britannia | title=Hobby Games: The 100 Best | last=Dalgliesh | first=Tom | editor-last=Lowder | editor-first=James | editor-link=James Lowder | publisher=Green Ronin Publishing | year=2007 | pages=34–37 | isbn=978-1-932442-96-0}}
Dalgliesh, Steve Brewster, and Lance Gutteridge formed the game company Gamma Two Games in 1972, which became Columbia Games in 1982.{{Cite book|author=Shannon Appelcline|title=Designers & Dragons|publisher=Mongoose Publishing|year=2011| isbn= 978-1-907702-58-7}}{{rp|181}} Brewster left in the mid-1970s and Gutteridge left in the mid-1980s, leaving the company entirely to Dalgliesh.{{rp|181}} Dalgliesh designed Quebec 1759, War of 1812, Napoleon, Slapshot, Klondike, Smoker's Wild, Bobby Lee, Sam Grant, Dixie, Eagles, Victory, Pacific Victory, and Liberty. Dalgliesh co-designed Wizard Kings with his son Grant Dalgliesh, EastFront with Craig Besinque, Hammer of the Scots, Crusader Rex, and Richard III with Jerry Taylor, and Sam Grant, and Shenandoah with Gary Selkirk.
Dalgliesh also entered into a partnership with N. Robin Crossby to publish a fantasy game called Hârn.{{rp|183}} Dalgliesh followed what he called a "{{sic|Rolls Royce}} business strategy" for Columbia (with the intention to produce "quality product with limited appeal but loyal following"), and had to defend the reputation of Columbia repeatedly over the higher price of the Hârn books.{{rp|183}} Dalgliesh's work on the Hârn system includes the sourcebooks Kanday (1986),{{cite book|last=Schick |first=Lawrence|author-link=Lawrence Schick|title=Heroic Worlds: A History and Guide to Role-Playing Games|publisher=Prometheus Books |year=1991|isbn=0-87975-653-5}}{{rp|185}} Kaldor (1986),{{rp|185}} Azadmere (1986),{{rp|181}} Melderyn (1987),{{rp|185–186}} and Pilots' Almanac (1988).{{rp|186}} Dalgliesh's company Columbia Games published the original work in 1983, and it has remained continuously in print by that company since then. After a disagreement, this partnership ended and Crossby continued to develop the game without the input of Delgliesh or Columbia Games.
Dalgliesh chose to move Columbia Games from Canada to Washington state in 1994; Crossby chose not to move with the company to the United States and afterward ceased production of material to be published by Columbia.{{rp|183}}
Dalgliesh's War of 1812 in Strategy & Tactics magazine from Decision Games won the 2001 Charles S. Roberts Award for Best Magazine Game.{{cn|date=April 2024}} His Hammer of the Scots board game won in the category of best historical simulation in the 2004 Games 100 "Top 100 Games of the Year" contest.{{cite news | title = 2004 Buyer's Guide To Games | work = Games | publisher = GAMES Publications | volume = 27 | issue = 196 | pages = 35–48 |date=December 2003 }} He was chosen by vote as a "famous game designer" to be featured as the king of clubs in Flying Buffalo's 2014 Famous Game Designers Playing Card Deck.{{cite web| url=https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/994700393/famous-game-designer-playing-cards-2014/posts/758142| title=Poker Deck| publisher=Flying Buffalo| access-date=27 March 2014}}
Personal life
Dalgliesh now lives in the state of Washington, just south of the Canada-US border, and sails as a hobby.
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- [http://www.columbiagames.com/ Tom Dalgliesh official website]
{{Wargames}}
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Category:American game designers