RIP Loren Wiseman

snrdg121408

Mongoose
Douglas Berry posted the following on the TML

Loren's brother has reported that Loren passed away at his home.


Wherever you are, raise a glass to one of the men who made Traveller great.


We Keep The Flame.
 
Marc Miller posted this on Facebook (RIP, Good Sir):

I first met Loren Wiseman more than forty years ago: he was one of the small group who played games in the University Union at Illinois State University, and a fountain of knowledge about history in general and ancient history specifically. When Frank Chadwick, Rich Banner, and I created Game Designers’ Workshop, we immediately added Loren to our partnership because he was a solid, dependable, and insightful friend. I have never regretted being in business with Loren.

Loren designed the fifth game published by GDW: Eagles, Rome on the Rhine Frontier, AD 15. He had a catchy concept: retrieving lost Roman legion standards (the Eagles) from the Germanic tribes, and he did an excellent job that made us proud. We were equally proud (and a bit jealous) when Avalon Hill picked up the game and published it under their banner. He followed up with Pharsalus, a board wargame of the Roman Civil War 48 BC in 1977.

Loren did a variety of jobs at GDW and they shaped everyone’s perception of him. He ran the warehouse at a time when everything was done with pen and paper and by hand. When we created the Journal of the Travellers’ Aid Society, he became its editor.

Loren also was the line developer for Twilight: 2000. The process at GDW was for the designer to write the text, but the developer brought together that text and some draft diagrams and some art needs, typeset it, and then made sure it was properly published. It also fell to Loren to design titles in the series (out of 46 supplementary titles, he is credited with designing 20).

After GDW closed its doors (in 1995), Loren moved to Steve Jackson Games in a variety of roles, including editor of their Journal of the Travellers’ Aid Society online edition.

Along the way, Loren was recognized for his excellence and expertise: with the H G Wells Award for Going Home (1986), and the H G Wells Award three years running for the Journal of the Travellers’ Aid Society (1979-1980-1981). In 2004, Loren received perhaps the highest of honors within the gaming community: he was inducted into the Adventure Gaming Hall of Fame, and the above recounting of his credits gives some insight into why.

But I remember Loren as a friend and a game player. I remember he and I both in a board game competition at GenCon many years ago. I rarely play games, and so I was gratified to make the finals, but in the end Loren beat me. That is what the industry he loved is about: friendly competition, with an emphasis on “friendly.”
 
Hello JMISBEST,

JMISBEST said:
I have never even heard of the guy, but any human death is sad. My condolences to those that knew him

Loren Wiseman helped create Traveller along with Marc Miller and the staff of GDW now FFE. He also was very involved with SJG GURPS Traveller and their JTAS e-magazine.
 
Why my only personal contact with Loren was a few minutes at a GDW booth in the 80's, and email and traveller mailing list posts and other internet forums etc,
I always found Loren to be extremely helpful, pleasant and often extremely funny and witty in some of his posts.

He was terribly important in the early days of GDW as one of its most public faces of its developers of traveller and other GDW games. and deservedly is seen as one of the original founders of traveller along side Mark

Loren the traveller community will miss you both for the wealth of traveller lore you had, but also for the humor you had dealing with us.

Chumbly :(
 
I knew Mark had a few friends and associates who help him to developed GDW, but I never knew their names.
And now I know the name of Loren Wiseman.

May he enter jump space peacefully.
 
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