Jim Dunnigan Explained

James F. Dunnigan
Birth Date:8 August 1943
Birth Place:Rockland County, New York, United States
Education:Columbia University (BA)
Occupation:Author, military analyst, wargame designer

James F. Dunnigan (born August 8, 1943) is an author, military-political analyst, Defense and State Department consultant, and wargame designer currently living in New York City.

Career

Dunnigan was born in Rockland County, New York. After high school, he volunteered for the military instead of waiting to be drafted. From 1961 to 1964, he worked as a repair technician for the Sergeant ballistic missile; his service included a tour in Korea. Afterwards, he attended Pace University studying accounting, then transferred to Columbia University, graduating with a degree in history in 1970.[1]

In college he became involved in wargaming. He designed Jutland, which Avalon Hill published in 1967, following it up with 1914 the next year, and PanzerBlitz in 1970, which eventually sold more than 300,000 copies.[2] Meanwhile, Dunnigan had founded his own company, initially known as Poultron Press, and which was soon renamed to Simulations Publications Inc. (SPI).[3] Dunnigan created SPI to save the magazine Strategy & Tactics, which at that time was published by Chris Wagner.[3] Dunnigan had been contributing material to the magazine since its second issue in February 1967, and when Wagner was having financial challenges with the magazine he sold the rights to Dunningan for $1.[3] Dunnigan took over a windowless basement in the Lower East Side of New York City where he published his first issue, Strategy & Tactics #18 in September 1969; every issue included a new wargame beginning with that issue.[3] Dunnigan also designed the game Sniper! (1973).[3] Dunnigan later designed Dallas: The Television Role-Playing Game (1980), which was the first published licensed role-playing game.[3] In 1980, Dunnigan was forced to leave SPI as the financial situation at the company was deteriorating.[3] He left SPI to write more books, begin modeling financial markets, and pursue other projects.[4]

Between 1966 and 1992, he designed over 100 wargames and other conflict simulations, ranging from 1969's Up Against the Wall, Motherfucker about the student takeover at Columbia (which he witnessed as a bystander[5]), to the gigantic War in Europe, to the online Hundred Years War with his long-time partners Albert Nofi and Daniel Masterson, which has been running since 1992.

In 1979, he wrote The Complete Wargames Handbook (first edition), and in 1980 How to Make War.[4]

Dunnigan contributed to Three-Sixty Pacific's Victory at Sea but, he claimed, was not allowed to finish the computer wargame's design, although it was advertised as "James F. Dunnigan's Victory at Sea".[6]

With his partners from the Hundred Years War, Daniel Masterson and Albert Nofi, Dunnigan founded the online military news site StrategyPage in 1999, of which he is the editor-in-chief. Podcasts of his commentaries on history, military affairs, and the contemporary world are regularly posted on StrategyPage.Com and as at Instapundit.com

Dunnigan regularly lectures at military and academic institutions, such as the Chief of Naval Operations Strategic Studies Group, in Newport, Rhode Island.[7]

Awards/recognition

In 1975, Dunnigan was inducted into the Charles Roberts Awards Hall of Fame.[8] In 1999 Pyramid magazine named him as one of the millennium's most influential persons "at least in the realm of adventure gaming".[9] He was honored as a "famous game designer" by being featured on the king of diamonds in Flying Buffalo's 2008 Famous Game Designers Playing Card Deck.[10]

Books

Co-author

As editor and co-author
With William Martel
With Austin Bay
With Albert Nofi
With Daniel Masterson
With Raymond M. Macedonia

Other works

Games

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Columbia Spectator 8 December 1969 — Columbia Spectator . June 1, 2022 . spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu.
  2. Book: Dunnigan, James F . Wargames Handbook. 2000. Writers Club Press. New York. 0-595-15546-4. 398. Appendix. 3rd .
  3. Book: Shannon Appelcline. Designers & Dragons. Mongoose Publishing. 2011. 978-1-907702-58-7.
  4. Book: Dunnigan, James F. . Afterword . Hobby Games: The 100 Best . Lowder . James . James Lowder . . 2007 . 376 . 978-1-932442-96-0.
  5. According to Dunnigan he was a student at Columbia University that season and, although he has not participated in the action, several of his friends did. Some of these worked in the school newspaper and asked Dunnigan to make a game for the first anniversary of The Spectator. Quoted in Book: Dunnigan, James F . Wargames Handbook. 2000. Writers Club Press. New York. 0-595-15546-4. 405. Appendix. 3rd .
  6. Lombardi . Chris . May 1994 . The Old Man And The Sea . Computer Gaming World . 152–156 .
  7. Web site: United States Naval War College . December 11, 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081101124809/http://www.nwc.navy.mil/newportlinks/ssg/overview.aspx . November 1, 2008 . dead .
  8. Web site: Charles S. Roberts Award Winners (1975). Academy of Adventure Gaming Arts & Design. August 15, 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080507063457/http://www.originsgamefair.com/awards/1975 . May 7, 2008.
  9. Second Sight: The Millennium's Best "Other" Game and The Millennium's Most Influential Person. Pyramid (Online). Haring. Scott D.. December 24, 1999. February 15, 2008.
  10. Web site: Poker Deck. Flying Buffalo. February 11, 2014. March 4, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304192820/http://www.flyingbuffalo.com/pokerdeck.htm. dead.