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{{ | {{Character | ||
|image= | |image = [[Image:Gord01.jpg|250px]] | ||
|caption= | |caption = Gord the Rogue, as depicted on the cover of ''[[Saga of Old City]]'' (1985). Art by Clyde Caldwell. | ||
|name= | |name = | ||
|home=[[Free City of Greyhawk]] | |truename = Carl Quapardus | ||
|gender=Male | |alt_spelling = | ||
|race=Human | |alias = Blackcat | ||
|class=Thief-Acrobat | |title = Master thief | ||
| | |occupation = Adventurer, previously: burglar | ||
|age= | |home = [[Free City of Greyhawk]] | ||
| | |formerhome = | ||
|alignment = Neutral | |||
|gender = Male | |||
|race = [[Human]] | |||
|ethnicity = | |||
|class = Thief-Acrobat | |||
|patron deity = [[Cat Lord]] | |||
|languages = | |||
|parents = Karal and Ataleena Carona | |||
|spouses = | |||
|siblings = | |||
|children = | |||
|age = | |||
|dob = | |||
|death = | |||
|raised = | |||
|turned = | |||
|destroyed = | |||
}} | }} | ||
'''Gord the Rogue''' is a young thief who reluctantly becomes a crusader for neutrality. | '''Gord the Rogue''' is a young thief who reluctantly becomes a crusader for neutrality. He was also known by the appellation '''Blackcat''' while active as a burglar in the [[Free City]]—a name "coined by victims who had caught a glimpse of his inky form," though essentially no one knew the two were the same.{{cite dragon|100|28, 29, 31, 32|At Moonset Blackcat Comes}} | ||
''Gord the Rogue'' is also the name of the series of novels written by [[Gary Gygax]] which continued the story of Gord once Gygax left TSR. | |||
Gord is | |||
== | == Description == | ||
Gord | Gord is small for a human, a hand's breath above five feet tall, slender and wiry. His eyes are iron gray in color. He has black hair and olive-toned skin (which allows him to fit in among the [[Rhennee]]). | ||
== | == Early history == | ||
Gord was born Carl Quapardus. His father, [[Karal Quapardus|Karal]], was the grandson of the seventh son of Rexfelis, the [[Cat Lord]]. Karal, through his own merit, ascended to the status of Prince of Panthers, but he deserted the realm of the Balance for the world of [[Oerth]] for the sake of his love, [[Ataleena Carona]]. A violet-eyed human with second sight and distant [[elf|elvish]] blood, Ataleena was the last in a long line of female seers. Betrayed by their own kin, Ataleena and Karal were slain by the forces of evil. The orphaned Carl was raised in [[Free City of Greyhawk|Greyhawk's]] [[Old City]] by a brutal woman called Leena, who renamed him Gord. | |||
== | == Series overview == | ||
The series of novels follows the progress of the orphan beggar Gord, from his lowly youth to his ascension as an avatar of [[Alignment (Dungeons & Dragons)#True neutral|Balance]]. Gord begins his career with less than heroic motives, but early mentors Gellor the bard and druid Curley Greenleaf continually steer him toward honorable ends. Eventually Gord is revealed to have a kinship with an enigmatic deity named the [[Cat Lord]]. | |||
'' | The series, originally designed to provide some social and descriptive details about Gygax's [[Greyhawk]] campaign world that he had not been able to fit into the limited space of either the 1980 folio edition or the 1983 boxed set, were written in a pulp "swords and sorcery" style reminiscent of [[Fritz Leiber]]'s ''[[Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser]]'' short stories. Gygax, who understood D&D appealed more to a male demographic,<ref>Gygax: As I have often said, I am a biological determinist, and there is no question that male and female brains are different. It is apparent to me that by and large females do not derive the same inner satisfaction from playing games as a hobby that males do. It isn't that females can't play games well, it is just that it isn't a compelling activity to them as is the case for males.{{Cite web | title = Gary Gygax Q&A (Part V, page 7) | publisher = ENWorld | date = 2004-01-25 | url = http://www.enworld.org/forum/archive-threads/71486-gary-gygax-q-part-v-7.html | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110614222728/http://www.enworld.org/forum/archive-threads/71486-gary-gygax-q-part-v-7.html | archive-date = 2011-06-14 | url-status = dead }}</ref> wrote the novels for that readership. | ||
=== Novels === | |||
The novels are written as an episodic collection, and would be difficult to read out of order. | |||
'' | [[File:Gord02.png|thumb|250px|Gord the Rogue depicted by Roberto Campos, ''The Return of Gord'', ''[[Dragmag|Dragon]]'' magazine #344, p46 ]] | ||
'''''Note:''' It should be made clear only the first two novels were officially published material from the IP holder (TSR) at the time. <br /> | |||
''The remaining novels, while written by [[Gary Gygax]], were published independently by New Infinities Entertainment and are not official Greyhawk content, making them "apocrypha", and are viewed variously by fans as part of Greyhawk or not.'' | |||
==== Novels from TSR ==== | |||
* '''''[[Saga of Old City]]''''' (1985) | |||
: The first novel in TSR's "Greyhawk Adventures" series. It details the "origin" of Gord of Greyhawk, starting in Gord's childhood and ending with his triumphant return to [[Free City of Greyhawk|Greyhawk City]] as a young man and master thief. He learns his trade in the [[Guild of Beggars|Beggars' Guild]], and gets involved in the gang war touched off by the beggars encroaching on the official thieves' guild's territory. Gord travels and has a variety of swashbuckling adventures, ranging from participating in a war to liberating a young noblewoman held hostage. | |||
:The novel contains excellent detail on the City of Greyhawk itself, as well as additional information about the [[County of Urnst]], [[Ratik]], the [[Bandit Kingdoms]], [[Knurl]], [[Theocracy of the Pale]] and others. Gord meets up with boon companions [[Chert]], [[Gellor]] and [[Curly Greenleaf]], and together they venture into the [[Cairn Hills]], where they slay a [[cataboligne]] [[demon]] and discover a relic of great importance. | |||
'' | * '''''[[Artifact of Evil]]''''' (1986) | ||
: A continuation of ''Saga of Old City''. This is the second, and final, "Greyhawk Adventures" novel written by Gygax that was published through TSR. An ancient artifact of world-shattering power is uncovered. It is up to Gord and his companions to try and stop this artifact of evil from falling into the wrong hands. | |||
'' | ==== Novels from New Infinities Productions ==== | ||
* '''''[[Sea of Death]]''''' (1987) | |||
: Gord travels far afield to the [[Sea of Dust]] on a quest for a '[[Theorpart]]', hidden in a lost city. He must face rivals sent by [[demon lord]]s—the psychopathic dwarf [[Obmi]], who serves [[Zuggtmoy]], and the [[drow]] priestess [[Eclavdra]], serving [[Graz'zt]]. He meets and falls in love with [[Leda]], a clone of Eclavdra. Leda and Gord part at the end of the book as she returns to the [[Abyss]], impersonating Eclavdra in Graz'zt's service for the sake of higher ideals. | |||
'' | * '''''[[Night Arrant]]''''' (1987) | ||
: A collection of nine short stories chronicling, among other things, the time period between ''Saga of Old City'' and ''Artifact of Evil'', with Gord in his early twenties, set largely in the [[Free City]]. ''Night Arrant'' provides a wide variety of outlooks on Gord's world, and features several intriguing characters and situations. The first story, "The Weird Occurance at Odd Alley," was meant for publication the newly-TSR-owned "Amazing Stories" magazine, though this failed to materialize. | |||
* '''''[[City of Hawks]]''''' (1987) | |||
: A prequel to ''Saga of Old City'', and details Gord's rise from simple beggar to master thief are detailed as is his search for his heritage. Much of its action runs parallel to that novel. Herein, we discover clues to Gord's origin, travel to the [[Plane of Shadow|Demiplane of Shadow]] and learn of the Balance, a group of neutral-minded crusaders for the delicate balance of [[Oerth]]'s celestial power. | |||
* '''''[[Come Endless Darkness]]''''' (1988) | |||
: This novel continues where ''Sea of Death'' left off. Gord becomes a Champion of the Balance and, with Gellor and Chert, he journeys to the [[Abyss]] to rescue [[Leda]], who has taken [[Eclavdra]]'s position in the clergy of [[Graz'zt]]. Their quest to stop evil and chaos from taking over the multiverse continues. A great war is fought in the Abyss, and several well-known demons make their first (and final) appearance, here. A hugely-powerful being known as Lord Entropy throws in his lot with the Lords of Balance, though he is little trusted. | |||
* '''''[[Dance of Demons]]''''' (1990) | |||
: The finale, in which Gord (as the "Champion of Balance") and Gellor enter the [[Abyss]], on a mission from the world's most powerful forces of Balance, to retrieve the remaining [[Theorpart]]s. The goal is nothing less than to free [[Tharizdun]], the long-imprisoned god of ultimate evil and entropy, and to finally destroy him. | |||
=== Uncollected short stories === | |||
== | * "'''At Moonset Blackcat Comes'''" (Aug 1985) | ||
: This short story is an early tale of Gord and his friend [[Chert]] accepting a mission for the [[Cat Lord]]. Published in [[dragmag|Dragon]] #100. It was the first published story of Gord and was a preview of sorts for ''Saga of Old City'' which was coming out at the same time. It takes place between ''Saga of Old City'' and ''Artifact of Evil''. | |||
* "'''Evening Odds'''" (1996) | |||
: Takes place sometime after the events of ''Dance of Demons.'' Gord has been deposed from his position as the new Cat Lord and is traveling the alternate realities as a Champion of Balance. In the course of the story he upsets a plot by the archfiend [[Baphomet]] on modern [[Earth]]. Published in ''Pawn of Chaos: Tales of the Eternal Champion'', an anthology of fiction, each inspired by the mythos created by Michael Moorcock. | |||
* "'''The Return of Gord'''" (June 2006) | |||
: A caper story set during Gord's days as a master thief in the City of Greyhawk. Published in ''[[dragmag|Dragon]]'' #344. | |||
==Publication history== | |||
[[File:GordNovelLogo01.png|250px|thumb|The logo of the Gord the Rogue novel series by [[Gary Gygax]], c.1987.]] | |||
Even before ''Saga of Old City'' rolled off the presses in November 1985, Gygax wrote a sequel, ''[[Artifact of Evil]]''. He also authored a short story, "At Moonset Blackcat Comes", that appeared in the special 100th issue of ''Dragon'' magazine in August 1985. This introduced Gord the Rogue to gamers just before ''Saga of Old City'' was scheduled to be released.<ref name=blackcat>{{cite magazine| last = Gygax | first = Gary | authorlink=Gary Gygax | title = At Moonset Blackcat Comes | journal = Dragon | issue = 100| pages = 22-32| publisher = TSR | location = Lake Geneva WI | date = August 1985}}</ref> | |||
However, at the same time, various board members of TSR had different visions of the company's future, which caused a power struggle, and Gygax resigned all positions with TSR, Inc. in October 1986 and settled his disputes with TSR in December 1986.<ref name="Dragon122">Gygax, Gary 1987. "From the Sorcerer's Scroll", ''[[Dragon (magazine)|Dragon]]'' 122:40 (Jun 1987)</ref>. By the terms of his settlement with TSR, Gygax kept the rights to Gord the Rogue as well as all D&D characters whose names were anagrams or plays on his own name (for example, [[Yrag]] and [[Zagyg]]).<ref>{{cite web | title = Gary Gygax: Q & A (Part IX, Page 91) | publisher = EN World | date = October 20, 2005 | url = http://www.enworld.org/forum/archive-threads/125997-gary-gygax-q-part-ix-91.html | access-date = March 15, 2009 | quote = Anagrams of my name are exclusively my property according to my settlement agreement with TSR, so that is how I can use Zagyg, or Zagig, as well as Yrag. | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120319233434/http://www.enworld.org/forum/archive-threads/125997-gary-gygax-q-part-ix-91.html | archive-date = March 19, 2012 | url-status = dead }}</ref> | |||
After Gygax left TSR in 1985, he continued to write several more ''Gord the Rogue'' novels, which were published by [[New Infinities Productions]]—''Sea of Death'' (1987), ''Night Arrant'' (1987), ''City of Hawks'' (1987), ''Come Endless Darkness'' (1988), and ''Dance of Demons'' (1988). In Gygax's absence, however, TSR moved the Greyhawk storyline in new directions and the line of ''Greyhawk Adventures'' novels (without Gord the Rogue) continued, authored by [[Rose Estes]]. In a literary declaration that he did not appreciate that direction, that his version of Oerth was over, and wanting to make a clean break with all things Greyhawk and D&D, Gygax destroyed his version of Oerth in the final Gord the Rogue novel, ''Dance of Demons''.<ref>{{cite web | title = Q&A with Gary Gygax | publisher = EN World | date = 2004-11-19 | url = https://www.enworld.org/threads/q-a-with-gary-gygax.22566/post-1864775 | accessdate = April 16, 2025 |quote='''Q:''' After you left TSR, you finished the Gord the Rogue books. At the end of the cycle, Oerth bites the bullet. Was this your way of saying that Greyhawk is dead and that fans should turn away from TSR's version with disdain?" '''Gygax''': "More my way of saying that since T$R had killed the setting with trash releases, it was time to wipe out the shame by obliterating the setting. Of course, I left a means of restoring it hidden within in the Gord story saga. }}</ref> | |||
==Reception== | |||
The most frequent commendation the series receives is as a source of setting material for Greyhawk. The details of various nations and locations throughout the [[Flanaess]] are often not found elsewhere. And especially the depiction of the [[Free City of Greyhawk]] is a very clear and unrivaled view of Gygax's take on the city and of the rest of the world.<ref name=goodreads>{{cite web |title= Saga of Old City |url=https://goodreads.com/book/show/729234.Saga_of_Old_City__Greyhawk_Adventures___1_ | format= |work=Goodreads.com |publisher= |date= |dateformat= |accessdate=20 August 2025 |postscript= }}</ref> | |||
The series is sometimes criticized for its descriptions of female characters, and for being written in the overly complicated prose for which [[Gary Gygax]] is well-known. As one might expect because fantasy fiction almost did not exist at the time, much of the plot feels like a depiction of an adventure or "a bunch of DnD scenarios" where one can see game rules used as narrative details and "almost pinpoint the moment after each adventure when Gord levels up," as one reviewer states it.<ref name=goodreads /> | |||
Another criticism is that Gord seems to be a "Gary Stu" (or male "Mary Sue") characters and that "it's clear that Gord is the author's Precious."<ref name=goodreads /> | |||
In a 2021 ''Io9'' series revisiting older ''Dungeons & Dragons'' novels, Rob Bricken described Gord as "a young street urchin who rises from poverty and imprisonment to become one of the greatest thieves on the planet" and goes on to say that "Gygax also revels in the misery he can inflict upon Gord". He described Gord's adventures as "a series of ho-hum ''D&D'' game sessions" with "no overarching plot" or and "no emotional growth". Bricken felt that the novel and its plot were "all terrible, but it might be mitigated if Gord weren't so ''deeply'' unlikeable".<ref>{{Cite web|last=Bricken|first=Rob|date=May 31, 2021|title=Dungeons & Dragons & Novels: Revisiting Gary Gygax's Saga of Old Town|url=https://gizmodo.com/dungeons-dragons-novels-revisiting-gary-gygaxs-sag-1846976859|access-date=2021-06-04|website=io9|language=en-us}}</ref> Bricken commented after reading ''Artifact of Evil'' that "even in this mortal realm, where I've devoted my life to watching bad movies and reading bad books, reading more about Gord feels like a zero-sum game to me".<ref>{{Cite web|last=Bricken|first=Rob|date=March 25, 2022|title=Dungeons & Dragons & Novels: Revisiting Artifact of Evil|url=https://gizmodo.com/dungeons-and-dragons-gary-gygax-greyhawk-artifact-of-ev-1848694236 |access-date=2022-04-08|website=io9|language=en-us}}</ref> | |||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
*[http://home.comcast.net/~chris.s/gordmain.html Chris Siren's Gord's Greyhawk] | {{External link disclaimer}} | ||
*<!-- OLD LINK BEFORE SITE RESTORED ON GHO [https://web.archive.org/web/20040901194923/http://home.comcast.net:80/~chris.s/gordmain.html Chris Siren's Gord's Greyhawk], web.archive.org, Date Accessed: October 11, 2015 --> | |||
*[https://greyhawkonline.com/gordmain/ Krista Siren's "Gord's Greyhawk"] on GreyhawkOnline.com. | |||
*[http://web.archive.org/web/20160927045509/http://dyx.home.tlink.de:80/gordnoveldescriptions.txt Txt-file with summaries by Paul Stormberg], web.archive.org, Date Accessed: September 27, 2016 | |||
==References== | |||
====Citations==== | |||
<references /> | |||
*[ | ====Bibliography==== | ||
* [[Gygax, Gary]]. ''Artifact of Evil''. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1986. | |||
:———. "At Moonset Blackcat Comes: A Tale of Gord of Greyhawk." ''[[Dragon (magazine)|Dragon]]'' #100. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1985. | |||
:———. ''City of ''Hawks''. Delavan, WI: New Infinities, 1987. | |||
:———. ''Come Endless Darkness''. Delavan, WI: New Infinities, 1988. | |||
:———. ''Dance of Demons'. Delavan, WI: New Infinities, 1988. | |||
:———. "Evening Odds." ''Pawn of Chaos''. Clarkson, GA: White Wolf Publishing, 1996. | |||
:———. ''Night Arrant''. Delavan, WI: New Infinities,, 1987. | |||
:———. ''Saga of Old City''. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1985. | |||
:———. ''Sea of Death''. Delavan, WI: New Infinities, 1987. | |||
* Gygax, Gary, and K. R. Bourgoine. "The Return of Gord." ''[[Dragon (magazine)|Dragon]]'' #344. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2006. | |||
{{index}} | |||
{{wikipedia}} | |||
[[Category:Human characters]] | |||
[[Category:Rogues]] | |||
[[Category:Thieves]] | |||
[[Category:Characters of the City of Greyhawk]] | |||
[[Category:Characters of the Domain of Greyhawk]] | |||
[[Category:Novels]] | |||
[[Category:Apocryphal sources]] | [[Category:Apocryphal sources]] | ||
Latest revision as of 08:44, 20 August 2025
| Gord the Rogue | |
|---|---|
![]() Gord the Rogue, as depicted on the cover of Saga of Old City (1985). Art by Clyde Caldwell. | |
| Names and titles | |
| True name: | Carl Quapardus |
| Alias(es): | Blackcat |
| Title(s): | Master thief |
| General info | |
| Occupation: | Adventurer, previously: burglar |
| Home: | Free City of Greyhawk |
| Alignment: | Neutral |
| Gender: | Male |
| Species: | Human |
| Class: | Thief-Acrobat |
| Patron deity: | Cat Lord |
| Family | |
| Parents: | Karal and Ataleena Carona |
Gord the Rogue is a young thief who reluctantly becomes a crusader for neutrality. He was also known by the appellation Blackcat while active as a burglar in the Free City—a name "coined by victims who had caught a glimpse of his inky form," though essentially no one knew the two were the same.[1]
Gord the Rogue is also the name of the series of novels written by Gary Gygax which continued the story of Gord once Gygax left TSR.
Description
Gord is small for a human, a hand's breath above five feet tall, slender and wiry. His eyes are iron gray in color. He has black hair and olive-toned skin (which allows him to fit in among the Rhennee).
Early history
Gord was born Carl Quapardus. His father, Karal, was the grandson of the seventh son of Rexfelis, the Cat Lord. Karal, through his own merit, ascended to the status of Prince of Panthers, but he deserted the realm of the Balance for the world of Oerth for the sake of his love, Ataleena Carona. A violet-eyed human with second sight and distant elvish blood, Ataleena was the last in a long line of female seers. Betrayed by their own kin, Ataleena and Karal were slain by the forces of evil. The orphaned Carl was raised in Greyhawk's Old City by a brutal woman called Leena, who renamed him Gord.
Series overview
The series of novels follows the progress of the orphan beggar Gord, from his lowly youth to his ascension as an avatar of Balance. Gord begins his career with less than heroic motives, but early mentors Gellor the bard and druid Curley Greenleaf continually steer him toward honorable ends. Eventually Gord is revealed to have a kinship with an enigmatic deity named the Cat Lord.
The series, originally designed to provide some social and descriptive details about Gygax's Greyhawk campaign world that he had not been able to fit into the limited space of either the 1980 folio edition or the 1983 boxed set, were written in a pulp "swords and sorcery" style reminiscent of Fritz Leiber's Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser short stories. Gygax, who understood D&D appealed more to a male demographic,[2] wrote the novels for that readership.
Novels
The novels are written as an episodic collection, and would be difficult to read out of order.

Note: It should be made clear only the first two novels were officially published material from the IP holder (TSR) at the time.
The remaining novels, while written by Gary Gygax, were published independently by New Infinities Entertainment and are not official Greyhawk content, making them "apocrypha", and are viewed variously by fans as part of Greyhawk or not.
Novels from TSR
- Saga of Old City (1985)
- The first novel in TSR's "Greyhawk Adventures" series. It details the "origin" of Gord of Greyhawk, starting in Gord's childhood and ending with his triumphant return to Greyhawk City as a young man and master thief. He learns his trade in the Beggars' Guild, and gets involved in the gang war touched off by the beggars encroaching on the official thieves' guild's territory. Gord travels and has a variety of swashbuckling adventures, ranging from participating in a war to liberating a young noblewoman held hostage.
- The novel contains excellent detail on the City of Greyhawk itself, as well as additional information about the County of Urnst, Ratik, the Bandit Kingdoms, Knurl, Theocracy of the Pale and others. Gord meets up with boon companions Chert, Gellor and Curly Greenleaf, and together they venture into the Cairn Hills, where they slay a cataboligne demon and discover a relic of great importance.
- Artifact of Evil (1986)
- A continuation of Saga of Old City. This is the second, and final, "Greyhawk Adventures" novel written by Gygax that was published through TSR. An ancient artifact of world-shattering power is uncovered. It is up to Gord and his companions to try and stop this artifact of evil from falling into the wrong hands.
Novels from New Infinities Productions
- Sea of Death (1987)
- Gord travels far afield to the Sea of Dust on a quest for a 'Theorpart', hidden in a lost city. He must face rivals sent by demon lords—the psychopathic dwarf Obmi, who serves Zuggtmoy, and the drow priestess Eclavdra, serving Graz'zt. He meets and falls in love with Leda, a clone of Eclavdra. Leda and Gord part at the end of the book as she returns to the Abyss, impersonating Eclavdra in Graz'zt's service for the sake of higher ideals.
- Night Arrant (1987)
- A collection of nine short stories chronicling, among other things, the time period between Saga of Old City and Artifact of Evil, with Gord in his early twenties, set largely in the Free City. Night Arrant provides a wide variety of outlooks on Gord's world, and features several intriguing characters and situations. The first story, "The Weird Occurance at Odd Alley," was meant for publication the newly-TSR-owned "Amazing Stories" magazine, though this failed to materialize.
- City of Hawks (1987)
- A prequel to Saga of Old City, and details Gord's rise from simple beggar to master thief are detailed as is his search for his heritage. Much of its action runs parallel to that novel. Herein, we discover clues to Gord's origin, travel to the Demiplane of Shadow and learn of the Balance, a group of neutral-minded crusaders for the delicate balance of Oerth's celestial power.
- Come Endless Darkness (1988)
- This novel continues where Sea of Death left off. Gord becomes a Champion of the Balance and, with Gellor and Chert, he journeys to the Abyss to rescue Leda, who has taken Eclavdra's position in the clergy of Graz'zt. Their quest to stop evil and chaos from taking over the multiverse continues. A great war is fought in the Abyss, and several well-known demons make their first (and final) appearance, here. A hugely-powerful being known as Lord Entropy throws in his lot with the Lords of Balance, though he is little trusted.
- Dance of Demons (1990)
- The finale, in which Gord (as the "Champion of Balance") and Gellor enter the Abyss, on a mission from the world's most powerful forces of Balance, to retrieve the remaining Theorparts. The goal is nothing less than to free Tharizdun, the long-imprisoned god of ultimate evil and entropy, and to finally destroy him.
Uncollected short stories
- "At Moonset Blackcat Comes" (Aug 1985)
- This short story is an early tale of Gord and his friend Chert accepting a mission for the Cat Lord. Published in Dragon #100. It was the first published story of Gord and was a preview of sorts for Saga of Old City which was coming out at the same time. It takes place between Saga of Old City and Artifact of Evil.
- "Evening Odds" (1996)
- Takes place sometime after the events of Dance of Demons. Gord has been deposed from his position as the new Cat Lord and is traveling the alternate realities as a Champion of Balance. In the course of the story he upsets a plot by the archfiend Baphomet on modern Earth. Published in Pawn of Chaos: Tales of the Eternal Champion, an anthology of fiction, each inspired by the mythos created by Michael Moorcock.
- "The Return of Gord" (June 2006)
- A caper story set during Gord's days as a master thief in the City of Greyhawk. Published in Dragon #344.
Publication history

Even before Saga of Old City rolled off the presses in November 1985, Gygax wrote a sequel, Artifact of Evil. He also authored a short story, "At Moonset Blackcat Comes", that appeared in the special 100th issue of Dragon magazine in August 1985. This introduced Gord the Rogue to gamers just before Saga of Old City was scheduled to be released.[3]
However, at the same time, various board members of TSR had different visions of the company's future, which caused a power struggle, and Gygax resigned all positions with TSR, Inc. in October 1986 and settled his disputes with TSR in December 1986.[4]. By the terms of his settlement with TSR, Gygax kept the rights to Gord the Rogue as well as all D&D characters whose names were anagrams or plays on his own name (for example, Yrag and Zagyg).[5]
After Gygax left TSR in 1985, he continued to write several more Gord the Rogue novels, which were published by New Infinities Productions—Sea of Death (1987), Night Arrant (1987), City of Hawks (1987), Come Endless Darkness (1988), and Dance of Demons (1988). In Gygax's absence, however, TSR moved the Greyhawk storyline in new directions and the line of Greyhawk Adventures novels (without Gord the Rogue) continued, authored by Rose Estes. In a literary declaration that he did not appreciate that direction, that his version of Oerth was over, and wanting to make a clean break with all things Greyhawk and D&D, Gygax destroyed his version of Oerth in the final Gord the Rogue novel, Dance of Demons.[6]
Reception
The most frequent commendation the series receives is as a source of setting material for Greyhawk. The details of various nations and locations throughout the Flanaess are often not found elsewhere. And especially the depiction of the Free City of Greyhawk is a very clear and unrivaled view of Gygax's take on the city and of the rest of the world.[7]
The series is sometimes criticized for its descriptions of female characters, and for being written in the overly complicated prose for which Gary Gygax is well-known. As one might expect because fantasy fiction almost did not exist at the time, much of the plot feels like a depiction of an adventure or "a bunch of DnD scenarios" where one can see game rules used as narrative details and "almost pinpoint the moment after each adventure when Gord levels up," as one reviewer states it.[7]
Another criticism is that Gord seems to be a "Gary Stu" (or male "Mary Sue") characters and that "it's clear that Gord is the author's Precious."[7]
In a 2021 Io9 series revisiting older Dungeons & Dragons novels, Rob Bricken described Gord as "a young street urchin who rises from poverty and imprisonment to become one of the greatest thieves on the planet" and goes on to say that "Gygax also revels in the misery he can inflict upon Gord". He described Gord's adventures as "a series of ho-hum D&D game sessions" with "no overarching plot" or and "no emotional growth". Bricken felt that the novel and its plot were "all terrible, but it might be mitigated if Gord weren't so deeply unlikeable".[8] Bricken commented after reading Artifact of Evil that "even in this mortal realm, where I've devoted my life to watching bad movies and reading bad books, reading more about Gord feels like a zero-sum game to me".[9]
External links
Disclaimer:Any lore presented through the following links does not necessarily adhere to established officially published content, and the views expressed do not necessarily represent the views of the editors of this wiki.
- Krista Siren's "Gord's Greyhawk" on GreyhawkOnline.com.
- Txt-file with summaries by Paul Stormberg, web.archive.org, Date Accessed: September 27, 2016
References
Citations
- ↑ "At Moonset Blackcat Comes". Dragon #100 (Aug 1985), p.28, 29, 31, 32.
- ↑ Gygax: As I have often said, I am a biological determinist, and there is no question that male and female brains are different. It is apparent to me that by and large females do not derive the same inner satisfaction from playing games as a hobby that males do. It isn't that females can't play games well, it is just that it isn't a compelling activity to them as is the case for males.Gary Gygax Q&A (Part V, page 7). ENWorld , 2004-01-25.
- ↑ Gygax, Gary (August 1985). "At Moonset Blackcat Comes". Dragon. No. 100. Lake Geneva WI: TSR. pp. 22–32.
- ↑ Gygax, Gary 1987. "From the Sorcerer's Scroll", Dragon 122:40 (Jun 1987)
- ↑ Gary Gygax: Q & A (Part IX, Page 91). EN World , October 20, 2005. "Anagrams of my name are exclusively my property according to my settlement agreement with TSR, so that is how I can use Zagyg, or Zagig, as well as Yrag."
- ↑ Q&A with Gary Gygax. EN World , 2004-11-19. Retrieved on April 16, 2025. "Q: After you left TSR, you finished the Gord the Rogue books. At the end of the cycle, Oerth bites the bullet. Was this your way of saying that Greyhawk is dead and that fans should turn away from TSR's version with disdain?" Gygax: "More my way of saying that since T$R had killed the setting with trash releases, it was time to wipe out the shame by obliterating the setting. Of course, I left a means of restoring it hidden within in the Gord story saga."
- ↑ a b c Saga of Old City. Goodreads.com. Retrieved on 20 August 2025.
- ↑ Bricken, Rob. Dungeons & Dragons & Novels: Revisiting Gary Gygax's Saga of Old Town (in en-us). io9.
- ↑ Bricken, Rob. Dungeons & Dragons & Novels: Revisiting Artifact of Evil (in en-us). io9.
Bibliography
- Gygax, Gary. Artifact of Evil. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1986.
- ———. "At Moonset Blackcat Comes: A Tale of Gord of Greyhawk." Dragon #100. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1985.
- ———. City of Hawks. Delavan, WI: New Infinities, 1987.
- ———. Come Endless Darkness. Delavan, WI: New Infinities, 1988.
- ———. Dance of Demons'. Delavan, WI: New Infinities, 1988.
- ———. "Evening Odds." Pawn of Chaos. Clarkson, GA: White Wolf Publishing, 1996.
- ———. Night Arrant. Delavan, WI: New Infinities,, 1987.
- ———. Saga of Old City. Lake Geneva, WI: TSR, 1985.
- ———. Sea of Death. Delavan, WI: New Infinities, 1987.
- Gygax, Gary, and K. R. Bourgoine. "The Return of Gord." Dragon #344. Bellevue, WA: Paizo Publishing, 2006.
Encyclopedia Greyhawkania Index
The Encyclopedia Greyhawkania Index (EGI) is based on previous work of Jason Zavoda through '08, continued by numerous other fans. The EGI article has a list of sources, product names, abbreviations, and a link to the full, downloadable index.
| Topic | Type | Description | Product | Page/Card/Image
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blackcat {Gord the Rogue} | Non-player character | Reference | SEE Gord the Rogue {Blackcat} | |
| Gord the Rogue {Blackcat} | Non-player character | Artifact of Evil | 33, 36, 274, 279 | |
| Gord the Rogue {Blackcat} | Non-player character | Artifact of Evil | All | |
| Gord the Rogue {Blackcat} | Non-player character | Come Endless Darkness | All | |
| Gord the Rogue {Blackcat} | Non-player character | City of Hawks | All | |
| Gord the Rogue {Blackcat} | Non-player character | Dance of Demons | All | |
| Gord the Rogue {Blackcat} | Non-player character | Dragon magazine #093 | 23, 24 | |
| Gord the Rogue {Blackcat} | Non-player character | Dragon magazine #100 | 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32 | |
| Gord the Rogue {Blackcat} | Non-player character | Dragon magazine #344 | 46-55 | |
| Gord the Rogue {Blackcat} | Non-player character | Dragon magazine #AN2 | 99 | |
| Gord the Rogue {Blackcat} | Non-player character | Night Arrant | 67, 277, 278, 280-285, 287-289, 292, 294, 295, 300-302, 305 | |
| Gord the Rogue {Blackcat} | Non-player character | Night Arrant | All | |
| Gord the Rogue {Blackcat} | Non-player character | Sea of Death | 58 | |
| Gord the Rogue {Blackcat} | Non-player character | Sea of Death | All | |
| Gord the Rogue {Blackcat} | Non-player character | Saga of Old City | All |
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