• Mad Men actor (and BGG user) Rich Sommer has added an intriguing and unique prize lot on the 2012 Jack Vasel Memorial Fund Auction: a game night in Los Angeles with him and fellow actors Simon Helberg (The Big Bang Theory) and Jorge Garcia (Lost). Notes Sommer in the description:
Let me tell you right now: I know Simon and Jorge, and they like games. Our games. Good games. So this will be a LEGIT GAME NIGHT.
• Retailer Gary Ray from Black Diamond Games in California notes that he's through carrying Kickstarted games from small and medium-sized publishers:
Kickstarter on a product now says to me, "Hey, we've done our best to sell this exact product, along with bonuses you can't offer, direct to customers before you. But perhaps you know somebody we missed?" Unlike the PDF market, which sells a different product, or the direct sales competitor, who sells things at the same time as us, the Kickstarter product is sold to customers not only before we can get it, but with added benefits. As I've mentioned, the Kickstarter market is a tiny part of the game trade, but these small companies used to have a place on our shelf. Now I'm pushed to focus on the mainstream, which is unfortunate.
• Under the headline "Is this the oldest d20 on Earth?", io9 highlights a twenty-sided die dating from "between 304 and 30 B.C., a timespan also known as Egypt's Ptolemaic Period". Funny thing is that if you click through to The Metropolitan Museum of Art, where the die is housed, you'll find another die (shown below) dating from the same time period, which makes the headline question a tad silly since it suggests that only one such die from this time period exists. Ah, well – now we should be looking for a treasure table on a pyramid wall, or perhaps a hieroglyph that looks like a beholder... (HT: Dale Yu)