Do you want to get the latest gaming industry news straight to your inbox? Sign up for our daily and weekly newsletters here .
As Don Daglow noticed friends and former colleagues passing away, he felt they should be remembered. And so he started keeping a log of game industry professionals who passed away.
He calls the page In Memoriam: Games industry people who have passed away. And it now has more than 700 names, with the numbers hitting the dozens every passing year. It’s one of the cultural artifacts of a young industry that is now becoming older, and the page is not unlike other artistic industries that honor their dead in some way.
At the top of the page, Daglow put the lines from John Donne’s poem from 1624, For Whom the Bell Tolls.
Anyone’s death diminishes me,
because I am involved in mankind.
And therefore never send to know for whom
the bell tolls; it tolls for thee.
To that poem, Daglow added, “Never let them be forgotten.”
It’s a lot of work to do this, and during this time of year people remember to send more messages of those who have died to Daglow (he takes reports at ddaglow at gmail dot com). He has help from contributors such as Devin Monnens and Andrew Armstrong, who a few years back did a lot of work compiling names for the IGDA and The Internet Archive Memorial. Because he relies on friends and relatives to send in names, Daglow is certain that he is missing a lot of people. After all, the game industry has grown to something like 300,000 people worldwide.
As far as who to include, Daglow includes anyone who worked professionally at a game publisher or developer or as a games journalist. He has also included voice actors, motion capture performers etc. That means this week he added James McCaffery,
Read more on venturebeat.com