SUBSCRIBE
Tech Journal Now
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Best Buy
  • Software
  • Games
  • More Articles
Reading: We owe Fallout to an admiral and his officers teaching its designer to play D&D in 1979
Share
Tech Journal NowTech Journal Now
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • AI
  • Best Buy
  • Games
  • Software
Search
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Best Buy
  • Software
  • Games
  • More Articles
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Tech Journal Now > Games > We owe Fallout to an admiral and his officers teaching its designer to play D&D in 1979
Games

We owe Fallout to an admiral and his officers teaching its designer to play D&D in 1979

News Room
Last updated: April 18, 2026 8:47 pm
News Room
Share
5 Min Read
SHARE

In a new video on his YouTube channel, RPG veteran and Fallout Designer Tim Cain talked about the first time he was ever exposed to Dungeons & Dragons, a pivotal influence on the developer: Some of his mother’s coworkers showed him the ropes all the way back in the Carter administration. Oh, and they happened to be high-ranking US naval officers.

“If you started playing D&D on a computer, where there’s no DM, the computer handles it all, … you don’t have to learn how to run the rules,” Cain said, contrasting his experience of learning D&D from first principles with how the game now informs so many assumptions about gaming and role playing.

Cain’s mother worked at a Judge Advocate General (JAG) office, a division of the US military dedicated to legal affairs. “She came home one day and said, ‘The boys at work are playing a game, we’ve been invited over this weekend to play,'” Cain recalled. The “boys,” as Cain’s mother put it, “were some captains, I think one admiral in the Navy,” according to the developer. “We drove over on a Saturday and spent I think four to five hours at their house.”

Article continues below


You may like

The seamen were playing sans-miniatures, something which surprised Cain at the time. “A good first two hours were just making a character,” said Cain, who had played computer and board games before, but had never encountered anything like 1st Edition Advanced D&D’s snarl of classes, rules, and contingencies.

Cain’s first character? Unable to decide on just one class, he multiclassed right out of the gate with an elf Fighter/Cleric/Magic User⁠—a little bit of everything. “There wasn’t really a limit to what kind of questions I could ask and what actions I could specify I was doing,” said Cain. “Stuff was written on my character sheet, and I wanted to do it all.

Discovering D&D In 1979 – YouTube


Watch On

“Everything that day was new. I wonder if you’ve had a day like this too, where you’re sitting down, and you’re playing this crazy game unlike anything you’ve ever played … The polyhedral dice were new, I’d never seen anything like that.”

Cain said he was “absolutely enthralled” by the new game. “On the way home, I was super-excited. I was talking to my mom all about the game.” While she eventually withdrew from the play session itself to trade chili recipes with one of the officers’ wives, Cain’s mother was supportive of his interest: “My mom just turned to me and said, ‘Do you want to stop at the game store on the way home and see what they have?'”

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

The rest, as they say, was history. Cain got the AD&D Monster Manual and a boxed set⁠—presumably the 1977 version of the Basic Set, given the timing? He and his friends would voraciously play D&D in the coming years. In addition to eventually leading development on one of the great D&D games, The Temple of Elemental Evil, Cain has said that his deep understanding of 2E AD&D’s THAC0 system helped secure his job at Interplay.

While it’s certainly possible that Cain could have discovered the game somewhere else, it sounds like that fateful afternoon and the tutelage of the DM, who Cain called “Captain Dave,” were the perfect introduction to tabletop roleplaying. So I feel pretty good saying a hearty “thank you” to Captain Dave for Fallout, Arcanum, and all the other games Cain has worked on or influenced⁠—there are a lot of them.

Read the full article here

You Might Also Like

Analysts say Slay the Spire 2 is the best-performing deckbuilder of all time—and the competition isn’t close

‘Realtime-with-pause is not dead,’ says lead designer of promising turn-based game Star Wars Zero Company

Boy, this is awkward: Sony drops the first Horizon Hunters Gathering playtest directly on top of the Marathon server slam this weekend

Portal 2: Community Edition promises to take the game’s modding potential to new heights, and it’s out in open beta now

Spooky visual novel The Mermaid’s Curse is the best kind of sequel: a self-contained mystery

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

- Advertisement -
Ad image

Trending Stories

News

Seattle mayor floats moratorium on new data centers in city limits – GeekWire

April 18, 2026
Games

Turtle WoW classic server announces shutdown after Blizzard wins injunction

April 18, 2026
Games

A ludicrous Doom mod which adds 28 pilotable mechs just released after 2 years in development

April 18, 2026
Games

Dedicated nature watchers are combing every millisecond of GTA 6 trailer footage to exhaustively catalogue all of its animals

April 18, 2026
Games

Help! The Millennium Bug made all the robots in my mansion go berserk, and only Homer Simpson can save the day

April 18, 2026
Games

BAFTA pulls game trailer over ‘themes that may be a trigger’ even after developer revision

April 18, 2026

Always Stay Up to Date

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Follow US on Social Media

Facebook Youtube Steam Twitch Unity

2024 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Tech Journal Now

Quick Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?