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Space Adventures, Haunted Houses, Intergalactic Gaming: Richard Garriott Lives Large
 
 
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  Space Adventures, Haunted Houses, Intergalactic Gaming: Richard Garriott Lives Large
by Lee Purcell [Game Design, Interview, Visual Computing]
12 comments Share on Twitter Share on Facebook RSS
 
 
October 15, 2008 Article Start Page 1 of 3 Next
 

What do you say about a person who helped pioneer MMO gaming (Ultima Online), has recently created an exciting MMO game (Tabula Rasa), built a haunted house capable of terrifying even stoic adults (Britannia Manor), and is scheduled to make his first space flight in October, joining the team on the International Space Station? By anyone's standards, Richard Garriott lives large.

As the executive producer for the video game company NCsoft, he has added to his legacy in the gaming realm with the recent release of Tabula Rasa, which takes online players on an intergalactic journey of epic proportions. A certain number of these gamers, selected through a drawing, will partake of the space station voyage -- or at least a digital copy of their DNA will.

As part of Operation Immortality, the DNA sequences of a certain number of eternity-minded individuals will travel on a storage device to the space station. Who knows? If something tragic happens to the Earth over the next few years, these hand-selected souls may be reconstructed from their stored DNA information by some benevolent race of aliens passing by.

Richard clearly enjoys capturing the imagination and entertaining those around him. His early interest in magic is one indication. Another is one of his pet projects, Britannia Manor, outside of Austin, Texas. How many people on the planet get to build a personalized haunted house?

My earliest career inclination (at the age of ten) was to become a designer of amusement park fun houses. This was after a visit to the walkthrough Palace Fun House at Asbury Park (yes, the same Asbury Park immortalized by Bruce Springsteen on his first album). Richard's similar ambitions to delight and terrify people were fully realized, largely aided by millions of sales of the Ultima video game series, an accomplishment that catapulted him to millionaire status.

The substantial profits from his entrepreneurial ventures also contributed to the purchase of the roundtrip ticket, obtained through Space Adventures, to the International Space Station, tagged at $30 million. Corporate sponsorships and commercial ventures will help offset the costs.

No ordinary haunted house, the original Britannia Manor (which doubled as Richard's residence) sported hazards you might have to swim through, puzzles to open closed doors, secret hallways, costumed creatures offering talismans and clues to guide your journey, and an atmosphere so incredibly creepy that some adults called it the most frightening experience of their lives.

The entire event, in fact, was not that different from navigating the levels of a video game, except the costumed characters were real (as were the fire, water, and vexing challenges). Though the original Britannia Manor ceased operation when the high-tech boom went bust (1994), Britannia Manor MK III, recently constructed, offers new twists and thrills, including an observatory, underground passages, swiveling walls in the guest rooms that move beds between rooms at night, and locks that grip your arm when you try to open them. This man knows how to have fun.

Richard, the son of Skylab astronaut Owen Garriott, will be fulfilling a lifelong dream when he voyages aboard a Russian Soyuz rocket to the International Space Station. During the ten days living in low earth orbit (at an altitude of approximately 217 miles, completing 15.77 orbits a day), he will conduct experiments, including growing protein crystals which form perfectly under zero-gravity conditions.

With coaching from his father and extensive astronaut training in both Houston and Russia, the realities of the upcoming voyage are converging into sharp focus. Richard has been blogging on his experiences. The completion of his personalized space suit, from a June 27, 2008 blog entry, was something of a rite of passage.

"Big news to start my second week of June training came in the shape of a freshly tailored Sokol spacesuit," Richard wrote. "This is quite a departure from the heavily-used models with which we've been training until now, not least because it fits, is bright white...and has my name on it!"

"While at Energia HQ (the contractor responsible for making the spacesuits)," Richard continued, "I chatted with Oleg Fedorovich, who has made every Sokol suit since the beginning. Mine is Sokol #169. And I can officially attest to the quality of his workmanship, not least because they made me sit in the suit in my own seat liner for two hours...that is a long time to sit perfectly still, especially with spots here and there under pressure from the folds of an inflated spacesuit."

"However, if you're wearing one of these in an emergency, everything has to fit perfectly, so I consider those two hours time well spent to ensure pressure spots are as few as possible. While at Energia, I also tried on all my custom underlayers, including the flight suit, Farel survival suit, life preservers, and even the pair of girdle-like shorts and leggings that help keep blood in the upper half of your body post-flight."

 
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Comments

Anonymous
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Still would have love to seen Richard spend some of that $$$ on earthly charity pursuits. Thirty million could have been spent on taking care of homeless children, our troops, or even the environment. Leave the gross spending of capital the CEOs of EA and Actvision-Blizzard.

Roberto Alfonso
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The system works like this: you work hard, you earn money, you spend it in whatever you want. The government is the one who should take care of homeless children (it is not Garriott's fault that these children's parents lost their lives due crime, or that they could not maintain them, or that they lost their homes because of the bubble burst of these last two years), your troops (it is not Garriott's fault that you have troops fighting in Iraq) or even the environment (it is not Garriott's fault that the US government refused to follow the Kyoto Protocol). Judging someone for doing something with his money is hypocrite. The USD 700b bailout your government issued could have eliminated poverty through the world, but instead it is given to rich people (people much richer than Garriott, for sure) so that they can continue with their business as if they have never done anything wrong.

Sorry for the reply, but even if Gamasutra allows everyone to post comments, that kind of comments should be moderated, as they don't target the article at all.

Anonymous
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We can't criticise a man for fulfilling his dreams with his own money but, indeed, if his dreams were to help more unlucky people than just jumping on a rocket, I'd held Mr. Garriott in a much higher esteem.

Jacek Wesolowski
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Give it a thought next time you buy a video game instead of donating $50 to charity.

Trace o'Connor
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Garriott isn't just a game designer, he's a cult of personality. Oddball millionaire eccentricity like $30 million to go into space isn't JUST fun for him. It's an investment in his personal brand. It builds his personal mystique and therefore makes all the ventures he touches more interesting for it. Yes, hopefully he makes significant contributions to charity - I hope everyone does gives what they can at every income level. I don't fault the man for enjoying what's his -- and indeed, it's things like this that keep me interested in him, and the games to which he attaches his name... his brand.

Anonymous
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Anyone making a comment like this is only jealous and has issues..I hear people say stuff like that all time(for everyone)-- Judas once took issue with Mary-sister of Jesus' good friend Lazarus for her "wasting" some very expensive perfume to anoint Jesus. He claimed that the perfume could have been sold and the money given to the poor, but he actually wanted it for himself. Judas wasn't merely greedy, he was an outright thief. Examine yourself bro. Thanks for all your contributions Garriott!

Oliver Snyders
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Well, apparently (and it even says so in this article) he didn't pay the *full* $30 million, but I agree that this was his dream.

His father was an astronaut, he probably grew up at a time when being an astronaut was the best thing anyone could aspire to be and now he's fulfilling a life-long ambition. That's awesome! How cool!

It's not like he can't/won't contribute to society after this, or even hasn't before. Another civilian space passenger from my country, Mark Shuttleworth (still can't believe the irony), came into a lot of money and decided that he wanted to go to space, not before he allegedly gave each of his employees a hefty chunk of cash. Now he's involved with community projects and is the founder of the uBuntu Linux project!

Let people dream and maybe they can help other people reach the same lofty goals at the same time.

Anonymous
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Richard has ever right to spend his money on himself, but $30 million to go into space as a tourist may help his brand but smacks of someone self absorbed. I see enough of that in LA, I expected a higher standard from a gaming legend. I expect this exorbitant behavior from a Bobby Kotick or John Riccitiello.

Maurício Gomes
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How many times he must say that he is not only investing on himself, but also on research and other things? People think that investing in research and scienct is not usefull to poor people, of course it is! Without the bizarre theories about how a black hole behave we would never end discovering the formulaes needed to launch satellites in space, and those are needed for cell phones, now tell me, why you do not convince everyone to stop using their cell phones, then you sell that satellites and give the money to poor?

I am sure that when John Carmack manage to actually launch his own rocket (he is trying) peopel will start to blame him for poverty too...

And this is because they are good people spending their own money on science... I imagine WHY people do not go after politicians that spend money that are not theirs in personal cars and houses...

Anonymous
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Lord come back safely from space and do something nice for less fortunate on earth. All will be forgiven and some people may even buy a few copies of Tabula Rasa. :-)

Luke Rymarz
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I'm happy that Garriott was willing to spend boatloads of money to get himself into space. Hopefully that money will be reinvested into more affordable forms of space travel. We've got to have people like him so _I_ can afford to get launched into space in 20 years!

Steve Watkins
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To the attacks: How do you know he hasn't donated money - maybe vast sums - to charity? Maybe he has done one, two or many cheritable things in his days. And, BTW, it doesn't take a wad of cash to do a whole bunch of charitable things in this world. Throwing money at problems doesn't fix them - people and their efforts do.

Please post your personal charitable website links. Or maybe post that photo of you at the soup kitchen doling out food on Thanksgiving. Thanks.


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