Treasury of Archaic Names is a 1978 role-playing game supplement published by Judges Guild.
Contents
Treasury of Archaic Names is a supplement containing lists of names that have been keyed to numbers that can be rolled on percentile dice to generate names randomly.[1]
Publication history
As Judges Guild grew, Bill Owen's time was strained between the company and his family travel business, so as a result Owen dissolved his partnership with Bob Bledsaw in March 1978. Owen effectively sold his shares to Bledsaw, though he remained on a consultancy contract for a few years so that Bledsaw could spread out the payment. During this time, Owen authored Judges Guild's Treasury of Archaic Names (1979) and prepared a few documents for Bledsaw, before leaving the company.[2]: 192
Early in 1999 Judges Guild, led by Bob Bledsaw, returned on the web and began selling original Judges Guild products. Afterward Judges Guild took the same path as many other first-generation RPG publishers in the d20 age: they became a licensor, and their first partner was RPGRealms / QuickLinkInteractive. QLI reprinted just two books during the two years that they held the license — Dark Tower (2001) and The Treasury of Archaic Names (2001).[2]: 205
Reception
Steve Jackson reviewed Treasury of Archaic Names in The Space Gamer No. 33.[1] Jackson commented that "Not much use to players who don't also referee. Recommended for referees who take their naming serious – it'll be worth the investment."[1]
References
- 1 2 3 Jackson, Steve (November 1980). "Capsule Reviews". The Space Gamer. Steve Jackson Games (33): 35.
- 1 2 Shannon Appelcline (2014). Designers & Dragons: The '70s. Evil Hat Productions. ISBN 978-1-61317-075-5.