Posted on 06/24/2009 10:44:09 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Richard Garriott is a geek. He loves fantasy; he has two thin braids running down his back that, for pictures, he swings over onto his chest for maximum effect. Back in the 1980s, he developed a series of fantasy role-playing video games under the Ultima umbrella, making him, perhaps, the Henry Ford of gaming. He made a fortune, and he used it to build two houses in Austin, Texas, named after the home of the hero of his video games, Britannia Manor. (The one he lives in now, Britannia Manor Mark 2, is equipped with a set of secret passageways, artificial rain, underwater caves, an authentic 16th-century vampire-hunting kit, crossbows, armor, two skeletons, an observatory, and a lock of hair from a wooly mammoth.)
And, because Garriott is a geek, he has also used his millions to pursue his love of space. In 2000, he shelled out hundreds of thousands of dollars to be the very first self-funded tourist in space. But then the dot-com bubble burst, and he lost most of his money and had to sell his seat on the rocket. But Garriott loves space so much that, once he regained his financial footing, he decided to buy back that trip rather than resume construction on the still half-finished Britannia Manor Mark 3, the other casualty of the bust. This time, it would cost him $30 millionup from $20 millionand the training would take about a year out of his life, but it was space and, XXXX, it was worth it.
"It's so important to see Earth from orbit," he told me recently. "It's a truly life-changing event."
(Excerpt) Read more at reuters.com ...
Richard "Lord British" Garriott
Good for him!
I worked for Richard years ago in Austin ... he’s a great guy (liberal, though). I followed his space trek on richardinspace.com ... very interesting stuff.
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