Tribute to Gary Teter

Thursday, May 30, 2024

It is with a heavy heart that Paizo announces the passing of longtime software developer Gary Teter. Gary was a pioneer in the development of the Paizo website and its core behind-the-scenes software systems that have helped to deliver Pathfinder and Starfinder products for more than 20 years. He was integral in the creation of our subscription programs, forums, and more–all at a time when such technology didn’t exist.

Our hearts go out to his family and friends during this difficult time.

We’ve asked the Paizo team to share their thoughts below, and we encourage members of the community to do the same.

Thanks again for all your hard work to make Paizo the success it is today, Gary. You will be missed.

-Erik, Jim, Lisa, Maggie, Mike, Rei, and Vic

Photo of Gary Teter sitting in a booth


Gary Teter came to Paizo way back in 2004 at a pivotal point in the company’s history. We started off as a magazine company, and the process of inputting subscriptions and renewals was eating up the small profit that magazines made back then, so we decided to try to do it through a website. But this was in 2004, and there just weren’t any website options you could purchase, so we considered building it ourselves, which was a daunting task.

Gary was brought in as we were struggling to figure out what to do. He brought vision and hard work to the table, and lo and behold, we launched paizo.com and brought subscriptions online. Once the magazines went away, that same subscription service morphed into one of the financial backbones of the company. I’m not sure Paizo would be here today if Gary hadn’t started working for us. Since then, he kept the machine going for twenty years!

Gary also brought a sense of humor to Paizo. Remember “Talk Like a Pirate Day,” when Gary made it so everything you posted turned into pirate language? Or the secret Smurf thing where your avatar changed into a Smurf whenever you mentioned them in a post? That was Gary.

I loved working with Gary during those early years of paizo.com. The website was a blank page, and we could dream about what we wanted it to be. Some things were instant successes, like side carts. Others were left on the cutting room floor (I’m looking at you, Paizooties). But through it all, Gary had a love for the customer and did his best to make their experience on paizo.com a great one. He would spend late nights trying to shave off shipping costs just to save folks a little more money.

Gary will be missed at Paizo.

Lisa Stevens
CEO


Gary Teter was never among the most well-known employees at Paizo, but if you’ve ever interacted with paizo.com in any way, you’ve felt his influence. And if you’ve ever noticed some feature here that no other website has, Gary almost certainly played a major role in creating it.

Gary was Paizo’s third-longest tenured employee, after Erik Mona and James Jacobs. Paizo’s original webmaster, Rob Head, hired Gary in March 2004, while Paizo was still just publishing magazines.

When we hired him, paizo.com was mainly a collection of static pages, one for each of our magazines, plus a sidebar for brief news updates. You could subscribe, purchase back issues, and not much else. Twenty years ago, Gary was working furiously on changing that, adding message boards in August, and launching a real web store offering thousands of gaming products in November. While the site has evolved over the years, the paizo.com you know today is still built on the foundations Gary and Rob created two decades ago.

But as important as Gary’s contributions to the website were, his role in shaping the paizo.com community was in many ways even more impactful. With the launch of the message boards, Gary took on the role of “PostMonster General,” acting not just as the community’s first moderator, but helping to set the tone for all interactions on paizo.com.

Gary was serious about his work and always interested in the ways that evolving technology could be used, from the utterly confusing construction that is ents and loaves to using a chatbot to turn an ordinary deck of cards into a mystery game to play with his son.

Gary strongly believed in doing things the right way with a customer-first attitude. Whenever I would approach him with a complicated idea that I thought our customers would appreciate, he would explain the inherent difficulties that kept every other website from doing it, and then he’d figure out how to make it happen, and he’d usually do it quickly and do it well.

Gary also always approached things with humor. He once demonstrated a new feature in our back-end software to our sales manager, who flippantly complained that it had one flaw: not enough pancake bunnies (referencing a then-current meme involving a Japanese rabbit known for balancing baked goods on its head). So Gary added “Pancake Bunny Mode” to the tool, in which lines of animated rabbits loaded up with syrupy goodness marched across the screen—a feature that you could toggle on or off… unless you were the sales manager, in which case there was no off switch.

Gary was occasionally courted by companies that offered him much more money that Paizo ever could, but he genuinely loved paizo.com and the paizo.com community, and he told me several times over the years that he never wanted to work anywhere other than Paizo for the rest of his life. Gary’s contributions to Paizo were foundational and crucial, and I’m greatly saddened that he won’t be here to help guide paizo.com into its third decade.

Vic Wertz,
Chief Technical Officer (Retired)


I remember the change that crept through Paizo after Gary came aboard so many years ago. From over in the editorial department, his influence was subtle at first, but then Smurfs started showing up on the message boards. To me, those little blue gremlins were probably the most visual (and unexpected) of the manifestations of the glory that was Gary. But beyond the boards and the machinery of the virtual world, Gary was someone I always felt welcome to chat with, be it a happenstance greeting in a breakroom that developed into a full-on conversation, a discussion at a work gathering about the intersection of internet and gamer culture, sharing quirky cat-themed anecdotes, or just some good old reminiscing about the early days of Paizo. His presence in the very early Paizo chat rooms was always welcome and comforting, as was his sense of humor. He put humanity into Paizo’s infrastructure in ways I expect I’ll still be discovering, marveling at, and appreciating for years to come. I’ll miss you, my friend.

James Jacobs
Creative Director


I first met Gary, like many who interacted with him, online. I first found my way to this community through the message boards, and Gary was the guy running the show back then. He had an interesting way of moderating conversations and keeping the community entertained and on point. It was this community and the people in it that led me to freelancing, and though it sounds weird for someone in the tech side of the company being responsible for a word jockey starting his career, that’s the case. Gary was not only fun to chat with, he was also supportive. In the way-back times, a few of us started a chat room that served as a somewhat real-time version of the message boards where regulars would hang out and keep up with each other. I was in that chat room all the time and so was Gary, who was the first Paizo staffer we asked to join. It was in that chat room where I really got to know Gary. From the Smurf “prank” to the odd threads and experiments that went way over my head, Gary was always up to something interesting, and I swear, half the time you could see the twinkle in his eye even through text. When I finally joined the company and moved out here, it was nice seeing a familiar face in the office that was outside of my immediate department. We even lived in the same apartment complex, so I’d see him around outside of work too. Gary was a delightfully strange man, with a head full of concepts, ideas, and plans that I couldn’t even fathom with my puny word-focused brain. So, thank you for all the education and entertainment. We’ll miss you, Gary!

Adam Daigle
Director of Game Development

Photo of Gary Teter leaning against a boat railing


Gary Teter was a passionate developer with a soft spot for retro hardware and clicky keyboards. When we were still in a physical office, it wasn't unusual to see Gary rolling by my window atop his Solowheel on his way home at the end of the day. Once we all started working remotely, Gary lamented the loss of the day-to-day impromptu conversations that would happen just by virtue of having desks near each other. Those conversations could be about anything from how we might solve a particular technical challenge to why we didn't have more (or any) pneumatic tubes in the office.

Professionally, Gary loved solving complex or tricky problems and took great delight in a satisfying solution. He made a lasting impact with his creativity and dedication to his work. I especially appreciated the sense of whimsy he injected into our daily conversations and many of the things he did. His depth of knowledge and creative ideas will be missed. He was a one-of-a-kind personality who will always be remembered at Paizo.

Rei Ko
Vice President of Technology

It's difficult to share memories of a coworker and feel like you did them justice. Working together is such a specific context that you can spend years with someone and never feel like you got the full picture of who they truly were. So I will resist the urge to lay out some sort of comprehensive, definitive statement on Gary Teter. I’m not qualified to do that. I will simply tell what I can, in the hopes that others will fill in the gaps in my telling to form a more complete picture.

Gary was a wizard. If you told him you needed something built, he would go read the book on that thing and come back having built it. He would build his own tooling so he could have exactly what he needed to get his job done. He would cast magic with code.

Gary was one of the most customer-oriented colleagues I've ever worked with. Regardless of the other factors in play, he was always deeply grateful to the people who purchased Paizo products—the people who enable so many of us at the company to do what we love for a living. Every feature he implemented had an eye towards surprising and delighting customers, as well as treating them fairly and honestly, whether they found out about it or not. It was a matter of personal principle. He couldn't not do that.

Gary believed that learning was a lifelong process. Twenty years into working on the code-base for Paizo, he was still researching new algorithms, frameworks, and techniques—either for use on the job or just for fun. He always had a handful of pet projects at home to work on after he'd signed off for the day: an audiophile amplifier here, a spectrum analyzer there. A few years prior to the pandemic he learned to ride an electric monowheel because, in his own words, "I just decided that I wanted to be the kind of person who could ride a wheel, mostly because it looked awesome, and I’ve always thought that sort of thing would be impossible for me, and that it was time I let go of preconceived notions about what I could and couldn’t do."

Gary was a trailblazer. If you needed to get 30 people from here to there across all manner of difficult terrain, he’d figure out the exact route to take. Perhaps someone else would have to arrange the provisions, and another person would need to load and balance the wagons, and a third person would keep the caravan together along the way. But the path itself? The guy with the machete hacking through the underbrush 50 yards ahead, shouting back, "It's this way!"? That was all Gary. It wasn't until I reached the end of this paragraph that I realized that there's another name for that person:

Gary was a Pathfinder. And now he's gone.

And Paizo is the lesser for it.

Brian Bauman
Software Architect


Gary was one of the first people I spoke to on my first day at Paizo, and I distinctly remember thinking, “Oh, right, I work in the TTRPG industry now. Of course I’ll be working next to a bespectacled, bearded ponytailed guy named Gary with an esoteric sense of humor.”

That was only my first impression, of course; over the next six years, he made countless others. He was an old-school geek who embodied the absolute best of classic weird online and programmer culture. He was the owner of a desk that resembled the Iron Throne if it had been built from 20 years of Paizo products. He was the guy in our weekly Zoom meetings who always had a wall of oscilloscopes or something that looked like a half-built robot on a workbench behind him somewhere. And, like others have said, he was an incredibly smart and talented coder who cared tremendously about his work and what it meant to the Pathfinder and Starfinder communities. It didn’t matter whether he was working on code to save customers money by shipping in as few packages as possible, an uncheatable die roller for the play-by-post boards, banishing spambots to an endless Sartre-esque digital labyrinth, or some shamelessly goofy forum feature; he approached every projects with the same level of deadly seriousness and took enormous pride in ensuring that it was done right, no matter how ridiculous it was.

It's hard to imagine a paizo.com without Gary and his contributions, and his passing will leave a tremendous void not only on Paizo’s tech team, but in the company as a whole. My heart goes out to his family and loved ones, and I am proud and grateful to have had the opportunity to work with him for as long as I did.

Andrew White
Digital Products Lead

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17 people marked this as a favorite.

So long Gary. Rest well.

Paizo Employee System Administrator

13 people marked this as a favorite.

I'm not particularly good with grief or with writing, and couldn't manage put my feelings into words for this tribute. I worked with Gary for nearly 6 years, and I will never forget him. When Gary was excited about something, be it a game he was playing with his son, a funny joke involving scribbled tornados or an interesting problem he was solving at work his joy was palpable and infectious. He will be missed.

Liberty's Edge

12 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Pathfinder Accessories Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber

GNU, Postmonster General.

Condolences to Gary’s family, his Paizo family and those who knew him,


28 people marked this as a favorite.

I have a thousand thoughts about Gary and his influence on my life, both personal and professional. As Daigle pointed out, we had a chatroom where we would chat about all things Paizo (crashing said chatroom when Pathfinder was announced), and the PostMonster was a regular. I remember when I was first thinking about working for Paizo in IT and how I got to take a peek at the backend that kept everything running. It was a snapshot of how fiercely intelligent Gary was, and how deeply he understood how interconnected everything needed to be.
Deeply funny with that wry sense of humor that only life and living can provide, Gary was breath of fresh air in my burnt-out sysadmin days that technology could and should put the customer first in its approach. It was a reminder that at the end of the day, I went to Paizo's website because I wanted community (and to see what hooligans where in charge of the Dragon & Dungeon magazines now), and seeing how Gary used technology to foster that is something that I have never ever forgotten.
Rest, Gary. You have long earned it. I shall raise a parting glass in your honor.

The Exchange

7 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Maps Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber

My condolences to Gary's family and friends. Today I'll keep a guy who I just learned about in my thoughts.

Thanks for keeping things rolling for my favorite gaming company's website, Gary. I'm gonna go turn my avatar into a smurf again, now that I know who to thank for it.

Liberty's Edge

4 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Pathfinder Accessories, Starfinder Adventure Path, Starfinder Maps, Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber

Gary sounds like he was one of the greats. Rest well and condolences to his loved ones.

Paizo Employee Director of Brand Strategy

21 people marked this as a favorite.

Like Josh above, I had a hard time putting my thoughts and feelings into words in time to make it into the blog, but I worked with Gary for the last 14 years, and knew him for at least 2 years before that. It was those first 2 years, when I was a fan, that really stand out to me, because honestly, I interacted with him more as a Pathfinder fan and player than I did as an employee. It was that dedication to the community that really drew me to Gary, and I think that fan connection never left in later interactions with him.

When I was hired by Paizo, I came to the offices for a week of contract work coinciding with the company summer party a month or so before I actually made the move across the country, and of all the staff members who expressed their excitement that I'd be formally joining the team, I believed Gary the most. You could just feel the joy, see it in his twinkling eyes. When he said he was happy I was coming on board, there was no doubt he meant it.

Over my time at the company, I didn't work closely with Gary very often, as I said before, but when I did, I was always reminded of his humor, genius, and dedication to the company, the fans, and his colleagues. I'll miss his insights on new (usually absurd) technology trends, his interjection of much-needed nonsense (like the smurfs, pirate talk, and custom fan avatars—I'm looking at you, Sebastian and Kobold Cleaver) into what could have just been ordinary tech stuff.

Thanks for all of it, Gary. You are already missed.


9 people marked this as a favorite.

RIP PMG.

I remember getting to hang out with him regularly in the old unofficial Paizo Webchat.

During a period of time in which Paizo was having ISP trouble keeping their website up he bemoaned

"I knew we shouldn't have gotten our internet from Bob's Bait, Tackle and ISP Van"

He'll always be PMG (Post Monster General) in my head and heart and although I don't think I've talked to him since before the Pandemic, he'll be missed.


11 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber; Pathfinder Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber

RIP PMG,

As others have mentioned I often hung out with him in the Paizo Webchat as well.

I remember "helping" him with the forum code, by finding things like you used to be able to spam the boards by just hitting Submit Post multiple times. Or double posting to get around the smurf filter (post twice delete the first). Once he fixed that one he just set my message board image to a smurf.

Even though I haven't talked to him as much as I would have liked of late, he will definitely be missed.

Edit: And clearly I have forgotten how to format text on the boards.

Paizo Employee Webstore Coordinator

16 people marked this as a favorite.

Gary always had the answers. Or if he didn't, he'd tell you in a comical way that he had no idea and then he'd go earnestly research until he understood how to help you. Now that I think about it, whenever he went off to figure out how to solve a puzzle I put in front of him, I always pictured him as Gandalf poring over tomes in the archives of Minas Tirith. He really was a wizard. He cobbled together a system to sell magazine subscriptions and then over 20 years he helped it stretch and grow into the megabrain that runs our entire website.

To be honest, I was pretty intimidated by Gary when I first started at Paizo. It was daunting to know that he had built our entire system and everybody said how smart he was. But it did not take long in work chat with Gary to see that he was creative, hilarious, and deeply immersed in the Paizo community. I'm an appreciator of puns, and Gary had a delightful sense of humor that he was able to express perfectly through text, which isn't always an easy feat. When I was trying to distill what I wanted to say, I found myself looking through the Overheard at Paizo thread and chuckling at his quotes. I'm glad we'll be able to look through his posts and still keep a sliver of his humor with us, even if it's still a bit painful to remember now. Rest well, Gary. Your presence at Paizo was unique, and it is already missed.

Liberty's Edge

8 people marked this as a favorite.

My greatest condolences. As one of the FAWTLies, we pushed the boundaries (and his buttons) with the Pathfinder forums, but he was always kind and generous in his interactions.

Sovereign Court

3 people marked this as a favorite.

Very sad to hear of his passing, my condolences to his friends and family.


17 people marked this as a favorite.

Gary exemplified so much that I love about Paizo, its culture and its people. I only got to chat to him directly a few times, but he always had such wit and such insight. He was a key player in creating Paizo’s community and in nurturing it and enabling us to grow. His passing is very sad, but his life was one of those that inspires one to live better. Thank you, Gary for all that you did and the way that you did it. <3

Dark Archive Bella Sara Charter Superscriber

21 people marked this as a favorite.

I'm at a loss for words. Gary was the bedrock of my Paizo experience. He was kind and welcoming to the fans, smart, and funny. I was also a culprit in the unofficial chat community, and I remember Gary bringing us a website he discovered where you could create an AI car that would evolve to perform better each time. The chatters spent the better part of a day screwing around as a group and having a great time with that silly little website.

At my first PaizoCon, we drank together and I was sicker than I've ever been (I rarely, bordering on never, drink). But it was worth it, because the conversation was interesting, thoughtful, and funny. Just like all my interactions with him.

And, of course, he once let me hold the banhammer, in all its glory. It changed me, for such power is not meant to rest in the hands of mortals. Only one such as him could truly hold its power.

You will be missed dearly, Gary. Thank you so much for everything. I was lucky to be part of your world, even if it was a small (mostly) digital slice.


17 people marked this as a favorite.

This hit me like a ton of bricks. I don't think there's anyone at Paizo, past or present, that I interacted with as much as Gary. Whether it was driving him bonkers with FAWTL breaking the forums with its first five threads and somehow managing to keep them intact as the sixth grew longer and longer, following in his footsteps into ancient esoterica among the Loafs, or ghostbusting for vanishing posts, Gary was always the guy who was there, his blobby eyeball avatar an omnipresent friendly sign of his constant activity often accompanied by a colorful warning of "I'm about to try something stupid!"

I've been sporadic with my activity over the years but I was genuinely pleased to see he was still poking away at the Loaf monstrosity when I started visiting again at the beginning of this month.

The boards just won't be the same without you, Gary. GNU PMG, for as long as the community still stands. "A man is not dead while his name is still spoken."

Dark Archive RPG Superstar 2013 Top 32

13 people marked this as a favorite.

Gary was a legend, a hero, and a role-model. My early days in the Paizo community brought me frequently into Gary's orbit and I can genuinely say he was one of the reasons I kept coming back.

Farewell, noble PostMonster. You will be sorely missed.

Silver Crusade

14 people marked this as a favorite.

I am saddened to hear of Gary’s passing. He was a central figure in my early experiences with Paizo - a brilliant man who always stayed down-to-earth and accessible.

My deepest condolences to his family and friends. Farewell, PMG


6 people marked this as a favorite.

My deep condolences to Gary’s family, friends, and to Paizo.


15 people marked this as a favorite.

Gary was always kind to me.
I am greatly saddened by his passing.

Silver Crusade

22 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Starfinder Adventure Path Subscriber

Gary not only gave me a chance, he listened to what I had to say, gave me council, and protected me from a lot of shittiness. He tried to help Crystal as much as what little power he had could do. He was someone I looked up to and he taught me some things about being good to people as a manager and not just as a person. How to spend your capital wisely.

After I left Paizo, I didn't see him much, but his presence here was always felt. It worked for a kinder Paizo and a kinder Forum. Part of him will live on in this community for as long as it exists and I hope that's a good long time.

Rest in Peace, my friend and mentor.


12 people marked this as a favorite.

Very sad news today indeed. I never met him beyond a few short interactions on the web, but he seemed like a good-humored decent fellow. My sincere condolences to his family, friends, & the FaWTLies. I hope little Spooky was waiting for the PMG to guide him on their next planar adventure.

Paizo Employee Marketing & Media Specialist

9 people marked this as a favorite.

May his memory be a blessing. It's been wonderful to work with Gary here at Paizo, and the entire site and company is built with his joy in our foundations. <3

Wayfinders Contributor

9 people marked this as a favorite.

Gary was a kind and generous soul. I am sorry to hear of his passing.

Grand Archive

10 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Pathfinder Accessories Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber

I didn't know much about him before today, but I'm crying right now for his loss.
Thanks for everyone sharing their stories and grief. T_T
And may Gary smurf in peace. o7

[EDIT:] I'll take a note on my calendar, from no on, for me, May 30th will now be "be a smurf day" in his honor.


7 people marked this as a favorite.

Smurf in peace or having a blast wherever you're at, Gary.

Scarab Sages

13 people marked this as a favorite.

Gary was an awesome dude. I remember sitting at the dinner table with him for Paizocon 2012. Seems like a lifetime ago. He was good to we FAWTLY folk, through all those years and so many posts it seemed we’d crack the message boards. And his jokes were epic.

Rest In Peace, Post Monster, Lord of All Code. I’ll surely miss you.


3 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Adventure Path, Rulebook, Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber

I had a few interactions with Gary and he was always very friendly and helpful. He will be missed. My deepest sympathy to his family and friends.


15 people marked this as a favorite.

Wow. This hit hard, as I always considered the PMG the ‘face’ of Paizo. He was the one who rode herd on the cantankerous cat swarm that occupied the Off Topic Board. I remember sitting with him at the 2012 PaizoCon dinner, and it was such a treat to finally hang out with him and some of the other folks I had only known by posts prior.

Good luck on your next adventure Gary, whatever that adventure might be. You left the world a better place for you being in it, which is all anyone can ask for in the end.

Silver Crusade

9 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Adventure Path, Starfinder Adventure Path Subscriber

A giant sized loss for the world.

GNU to a true legend.

I shall become Smurf in his honour.

Grand Lodge

4 people marked this as a favorite.

I never knew Gary, but seeing the love and adoration from the community at his passing tells me everything I need to know.

May shooting stars ignite the smurfing night in honor of his glory.

RPG Superstar 2015 Top 8

10 people marked this as a favorite.

What sad news. Holding you all, Paizo, community, Gary's loved ones, in the Light.


4 people marked this as a favorite.

RIP Gary

Your contributions to Paizo are deeply appreciated.

My condolences go out to your family and friends.

The boards will be a little less smurfy without your presence.

Liberty's Edge

4 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber; Pathfinder Starfinder Adventure Path, Starfinder Roleplaying Game, Starfinder Society Subscriber

Condolences to his family and friends. For me he was one of the most memorable parts of the unofficial chat and it was good to get to meet him at Paizocon those many years ago.


4 people marked this as a favorite.

So sad to hear this news. Met him at a PaizoCon dinner, such a kind guy. And the early days of the Paizo forums made me realize how much bigger gaming was than my table in my town, and connected so many people who built the Paizo community. He will be missed, but his influence remains.

Smurf.

Sovereign Court

5 people marked this as a favorite.
Adventure Path Charter Subscriber; Pathfinder Adventure, Rulebook, Starfinder Adventure Path, Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber

Wow, I just saw this and I'm oddly impacted. I participated in some discussions with Gary concerning the weird Loaf stuff back in '06. And I was always impressed with how everyone really back in those days did all the jobs - I have Customer Support emails from him! I am thankful for having known Gary in at least this capacity.

My prayers are for his friends and family.


6 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Maps, Pathfinder Accessories, Starfinder Society Subscriber; Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber

I only saw the PMG post and dealt with him slightly, but I always felt he was an enormous part of the boards I was posting on. The Smurf avatar was what made me feel comfortable enough to post here, and I have felt a part of the community ever since. This is a terrible blow.

Rest in Peace, Gary.


5 people marked this as a favorite.

Such sad news. From everything I can tell, Gary was a wonderful person. Condolences to his family, friends, and everyone who knew him. RIP.


10 people marked this as a favorite.

We had so much fun with the PMG in FaWTL and in chat. I had no idea that he wasn't well, and am very saddened at his loss. My thoughts go out to his family. Does anyone still have a file of the artwork that Hugo made for him?


6 people marked this as a favorite.

It sounds trite to say, but I am saddened by his loss, and am blessed that I had the privilege of interacting with him. He has done so much for this community just by being a consistent presence, and I pray that his care and kind spirit continue forward.

I pray for his family and loved ones. Thank you, Gary, and I pray we get to meet again, some day - this time in person. God bless you.

e: Clarification.

Grand Lodge

5 people marked this as a favorite.
Adventure Path Charter Subscriber; Pathfinder Starfinder Adventure Path Subscriber

This made me sad. Rest in peace, Gary. My prayers are with his family and friends.

-Skeld

Grand Lodge

6 people marked this as a favorite.

I'm very sorry to hear of Gary's passing, and I'm grateful for how he helped foster a sense of community that helped me with making friends on these boards. My condolences to his loved ones.

Liberty's Edge

3 people marked this as a favorite.

May Gary's memory be for a blessing. May the community he helped build keep him and those dear to him close to their hearts.


8 people marked this as a favorite.
Mairkurion {tm} wrote:
We had so much fun with the PMG in FaWTL and in chat. I had no idea that he wasn't well, and am very saddened at his loss. My thoughts go out to his family. Does anyone still have a file of the artwork that Hugo made for him?

Do you mean THIS? I remember when this was made and I am glad Lureene was included in it!

Great memories.


3 people marked this as a favorite.
Eric Swanson wrote:
Mairkurion {tm} wrote:
We had so much fun with the PMG in FaWTL and in chat. I had no idea that he wasn't well, and am very saddened at his loss. My thoughts go out to his family. Does anyone still have a file of the artwork that Hugo made for him?

Do you mean THIS? I remember when this was made and I am glad Lureene was included in it!

Great memories.

Might be but access is currently limited.


3 people marked this as a favorite.
Orthos wrote:
Might be but access is currently limited.

OK fixed.

Liberty's Edge

3 people marked this as a favorite.
Pathfinder Adventure Path, Lost Omens, Rulebook Subscriber

Well, Smurf.

Ran into Gary ringing people out at Gen Con numerous times and have had a few interactions through the years. Always the friendly pinnacle of customer first, as all these attestations say.


7 people marked this as a favorite.
Eric Swanson wrote:
Orthos wrote:
Might be but access is currently limited.
OK fixed.

Yep, that looks like it. I remember seeing this just after I started posting in FAWTL regularly, could have named every single person in the picture back then.

Scarab Sages

5 people marked this as a favorite.
Orthos wrote:
Eric Swanson wrote:
Orthos wrote:
Might be but access is currently limited.
OK fixed.
Yep, that looks like it. I remember seeing this just after I started posting in FAWTL regularly, could have named every single person in the picture back then.

Huzzah! I’m in there somewhere. I think. Good times.


10 people marked this as a favorite.

I don't have a ton of heart to say much, but Gary Teter was very kind and patient with me, and handled my rambunctious younger self with incredible good humor. These forums were my main social outlet when I was young, and he was a huge part of why the community was the way it was.


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Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Superscriber; Pathfinder Starfinder Roleplaying Game Subscriber
Aberzombie wrote:
Orthos wrote:
Eric Swanson wrote:
Orthos wrote:
Might be but access is currently limited.
OK fixed.
Yep, that looks like it. I remember seeing this just after I started posting in FAWTL regularly, could have named every single person in the picture back then.
Huzzah! I’m in there somewhere. I think. Good times.

You definitely are

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