Chainmail
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Chainmail
Summary
Chainmail is a miniature wargaming[1]. Chainmail draws 219 Wikipedia views per month (miniature_wargaming category, ranking #1 of 8).[2]
Key Facts
- Chainmail authored Gary Gygax[3].
- Chainmail authored Jeff Perren[4].
- Chainmail's image is recorded as Chainmail Gary Con IV 2012 Moathouse.jpg[5].
- Chainmail's instance of is recorded as miniature wargaming[6].
- Chainmail's publisher is recorded as Guidon Games[7].
- Chainmail's publisher is recorded as TSR[8].
- Chainmail's genre is recorded as miniature wargaming[9].
- +1971-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of Chainmail[10].
- Chainmail's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/05hcm6[11].
- Siege of Bodenburg inspired Chainmail[12].
- Chainmail's title is recorded as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Chainmail'}[13].
- Chainmail's uses is recorded as list of tabletop role-playing games references[14].
- Chainmail's cites work is recorded as Tolkien's legendarium[15].
- Chainmail's cites work is recorded as Conan canonical works[16].
- Chainmail's cites work is recorded as Dungeons & Dragons[17].
- Chainmail's cites work is recorded as Three Hearts and Three Lions[18].
- Chainmail's cites work is recorded as Elric saga[19].
- Chainmail's cites work is recorded as Lake Geneva Tactical Studies Association[20].
Body
Works and Contributions
Authored works include Gary Gygax[3], a writer[21], 1938–2008[22], of United States[23] and Jeff Perren[4], a game designer[24].
Why It Matters
Chainmail draws 219 Wikipedia views per month (miniature_wargaming category, ranking #1 of 8).[2] Chainmail has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25]