| Gen Con Indy | |
|---|---|
Attendees in Lucas Oil Stadium in 2023 | |
| Genre | Gaming |
| Venue | Indiana Convention Center |
| Location | Indianapolis, Indiana |
| Country | United States |
| Inaugurated | 1968 |
| Attendance | 71,000 in 2024[1] |
| Organized by | Gen Con LLC |
| Website | GenCon.com |
Gen Con is the largesttabletop game convention in North America by both attendance and number of events. It features traditional pen-and-paper, board, and card games, includingrole-playing games,miniatures wargames,live action role-playing games,collectible card games, andstrategy games. Gen Con also featurescomputer games. Attendees engage in a variety of tournament and interactive game sessions. In 2019, Gen Con had nearly 70,000 unique attendees.[2]
Established in 1968 as theLake Geneva Wargames Convention byGary Gygax, who later co-createdDungeons & Dragons, Gen Con was first held inLake Geneva, Wisconsin. The convention was moved to various locations in Wisconsin from 1972 to 1984 before becoming fixed inMilwaukee,Wisconsin, in 1985, where it remained until moving toIndianapolis,Indiana, in 2003. Other Gen Con conventions have been held sporadically in various locations around the United States, as well as internationally.
In 1976, Gen Con became the property ofTSR, Inc., the gaming company co-founded by Gary Gygax. TSR (and Gen Con) were then acquired byWizards of the Coast in 1997, which was subsequently acquired byHasbro. Hasbro then sold Gen Con to the former CEO of Wizards of the Coast,Peter Adkison, in 2002. Gen Con spent a short time underChapter 11 bankruptcy protection, due to a lawsuit brought against them byLucasfilm in 2008.[3][4] The organization emerged from bankruptcy protection a year later, while still holding its regularly scheduled events and became larger than ever.
TheInternational Federation of Wargaming (IFW) hosted a number of small regional conventions in the months following its foundation in 1967, including the first annual club convention inMalvern, Pennsylvania, in August.[5] Some IFW gamers in the Chicago area could not make the journey to Malvern, so they had an informal gathering that same weekend at theLake Geneva, Wisconsin home ofGary Gygax.[6][7] Later this gathering would come to be referred to as "Gen Con 0". In 1968, Gygax rented Lake Geneva'sHorticultural Hall to hold a follow-up IFW convention, the Lake Geneva Wargames Convention, later known as the Gen Congaming convention.[8][9] The IFW, which Gygax co-founded, put up $35 of the $50 Horticultural Hall fee to sponsor this first Gen Con.[10][8] Almost 100 people attended. At the second Gen Con in August 1969, Gygax metRob Kuntz[11] andDave Arneson.[9][12][13] During these early conventions, the events centered aroundboard games and miniature wargames.[8]
Gen Con's name is a derivation of "Geneva Convention", due to the convention's origins in Lake Geneva. It is also a play on words, as the "Geneva Conventions" are a set of important internationaltreaties regarding war, the subject of many of the early games.[14] Starting in 1971, Gen Con was cosponsored by the Lake Geneva Tactical Studies Association.[15]
Beginning in 1975, Gen Con was managed and hosted byTSR, Inc., original publisher of theDungeons & Dragonsrole-playing game.[16] During the following decade the event grew and was hosted at a variety of southern Wisconsin locations, including anAmerican Legion Hall,George Williams College, and the former Lake GenevaPlayboy Resort. In 1978 the convention moved to theUniversity of Wisconsin–Parkside campus inKenosha, where it remained through 1984.[17]
A Gen Con West was held in California for only three years, 1976–1978.[18] From 1978 to 1984, Gen Con South was held inJacksonville, Florida,[18] and Gen Con East was held in 1981 and 1982, first inCherry Hill, New Jersey, and then inChester, Pennsylvania.[18]
In 1985, Gen Con moved to theMilwaukee Exposition & Convention Center & Arena (MECCA) inMilwaukee,[17] due to a need for more space.[19] After the move, attendance steadily rose from 5,000 to a peak of 30,000 in 1995, making Gen Con the premier event in the role-playing game industry.[20][21] In 1992, Gen Con broke every previous attendance record for game conventions in the United States, with more than 18,000 people.[19] Gen Con briefly joined with its primary competitor, theOrigins Game Fair,[19] and the two were run as a single convention in 1988.Wizards of the Coast debutedMagic: The Gathering at Gen Con in August 1993; the game proved extremely popular, selling out its supply of 2.5 million cards, which had been scheduled to last until the end of the year.[22] The ensuing collectible card game craze has been credited with generating the extra attendance that produced the 1995 record.[23]
Wizards of the Coast purchased TSR in 1997, which was in turn purchased byHasbro in 1999. Gen Con moved to the Midwest Express Center (now theWisconsin Center) in 1998. In November 1999 Wizards announced that Gen Con would leave Milwaukee after the 2002 convention.[17]Peter Adkison, founder of Wizards of the Coast, purchased Gen Con from Hasbro in May 2002,[24] forming Gen Con LLC to run the convention. The first show under Adkison's leadership took place that August in Milwaukee.[25]
The convention moved toIndianapolis in 2003. Peter Adkison attributed the move to the lack of hotel space, the convention center layout, and frequently broken escalators in Milwaukee's convention center.[24][26]

In Indianapolis, the convention, now called Gen Con Indy, continued to draw between 20,000 and 30,000 visitors each year, at theIndiana Convention Center.[27][28] Wizards of the Coast helped celebrate the 30th anniversary of theDungeons & Dragons game at Gen Con Indy 2004.[29] In 2005 Gen Con Indy generated the most direct visitor spending of any annual convention in Indianapolis.[30]
Adkison also restarted the convention in California, this time named Gen Con SoCal. Smaller than its mid-western counterpart, it drew approximately 6,300 attendees in 2005,[31] making it the third-largest consumer hobby game convention in North America. It was held in theAnaheim Convention Center.
In spite of Adkison saying that he did not want Gen Con to become a "mini-E3" in 2003,[24] whenE3 downsized in mid-2006, Gen Con LLC announced it would provide more show space for video game businesses.[32] Gen Con described their intention to "pick up where E3 [left] off".[33]
Also in 2006, Gen Con LLC ran the officialStar Wars convention, calledStar Wars Celebration.
TheIndiana Convention Center completed a major expansion in 2011, in large part, to accommodate increased attendance to Gen Con, at a cost of over $275 million.[34]
Gen Con was held in Europe in the 1990s, with the first annual European Gen Con held inCamber Sands, Sussex, England, in 1990, and Gen ConBarcelona in Spain in 1994. The European convention was held in England for 8 years, eventually migrating from Camber Sands in the mid-1990s toLoughborough, where the final UK-based European event was held in 1997; the same weekend on whichPrincess Diana died. There was no European Gen Con in 1998, but it reappeared in Belgium in 1999 for a single year, before again reappearing in Paris for three years between 2006 and 2008.Benelux Gen Con was held in the Netherlands in 1998 and re-occurred there in 2000. Gen Con Barcelona occurred five years, in 1994–1996, 1999, and 2004. Gen Con UK was held between 1998 and 2005.[18] A Gen Con was held inBrisbane, Australia, in July 2008 and again in September 2009. A third Gen Con Australia was scheduled for 2010, but was cancelled.[35]
When the COVID-19 lockdown prompted Gen Con to cancel the in-person convention in 2020,[36] it instead ran an online version.[37][38] While the in-person convention returned the following year, an online version was run concurrently until Gen Con ceased operations of Gen Con Online after the 2023 show.[citation needed]


The convention features a large exhibit hall filled with game publishers, artists, and related businesses, wherein most attendees spend at least $100.[39] The only game to be on the event schedule every year since the convention's inception isFight in the Skies,[8][40] later renamedDawn Patrol.
TheD&D Championship Series (formerly theD&D Open) is a long-running series ofDungeons & Dragons games at Gen Con, beginning in 1977.[15] The RPGA, beginning in 1981, has run large numbers of events at Gen Con, so extensive they have been given their own category. The RPGA events are primarily "Living" games where players create characters who persist between events. The RPGA first ran events in 1981.[15]

In 1987 a games library was added from which attendees could borrow games.[15] Appearing in 1994 was the firstMagic: The Gathering World Championship, won by Zak Dolan, who defeated France's Bertrand Lestrée in the finals.
Gen Con has featured a number of events that raise money for a variety of charities. These includeCardhalla, in which donated cards are used to build a large city. Attendees are then invited to throw coins at the city to destroy it. The coins are collected for charity. Cardhalla was first run in 1999. The gaming groupNASCRAG has runDungeons & Dragons events at Gen Con since 1980. NASCRAG events sometimes donate their ticket fees to charity. The games run tend to be humorous. The Gen Con Live Games Auction is another long-running event, though the majority of the Auction (including the Consignment Store) is not run for charity.


The EN World RPG Awards (theENnies) are an annual awards ceremony devoted to role-playing games. Established in 2001, the ENnies have been hosted at Gen Con Indy since 2002, and are organized and owned byEN World, aD&D/d20 System news website.[41]
True Dungeon is an immersive life-sized dungeon crawllive action role-playing game (LARP) run at Gen Con since 2003, featuring a series of puzzles and scenarios designed to recreate aD&D environment.
2008 was a tumultuous year, legally, for Gen Con LLC. On January 10,Lucasfilm filed a lawsuit against them, claiming breach of contract, conversion, and unjust enrichment overCelebration IV, held in 2006. The suit also claims Gen Con failed to give the money raised at a charity auction held at the event to theMake-A-Wish Foundation.[42] Gen Con filed a counter-suit claiming Lucasfilm had no basis for their claims and owed money to Gen Con.[43]
On February 15, 2008, Gen Con LLC announced that it had filed forChapter 11 bankruptcy protection, citing "significant unforeseen expenses associated with ... externally licensed events".[3] As a result of the bankruptcy filing, the Lucasfilm lawsuit was delayed until November 19, 2008.[44] Gen Con Indy 2008 was held as planned.
On November 20, 2008, a letter of intent to purchase Gen Con LLC's assets was filed with the bankruptcy court. It announced that a to-be-formed company called Gen Con Acquisition Group would purchase Gen Con LLC., for an amount equal to Gen Con LLC's outstanding debt.[45][46] Gen Con's president, Adrian Swartout, described the letter as "suspiciously cryptic" and concluded that the offer "is not in the best interest of our creditors".[47] Gen Con rejected the hostile takeover bid, and the bankruptcy court allowed Gen Con to emerge from bankruptcy in January 2009, 11 months after it had entered Chapter 11.[47][48]
In 2008,Christian Children's Fund was reported to have turned down $17,398 from a GenCon Live Game Auction, during that year's Gen Con.[49] The donation was made in honor of Gary Gygax, who died in 2008, and was a frequent donor to CCF.[50] Some individuals within the gaming community expressed disappointment about the decision; author and game designerRich Burlew, for example, called it "insulting,"[51] and the response by gamers led both the CCF and Gen Con to issue official statements explaining what had happened.[52] As a result of the misunderstanding, Gen Con chose to support a different charity.[50]
On March 23, 2015, Adrian Swartout sent a letter to Indiana GovernorMike Pence, asking the governor to reconsider his intent to signSB 101, the so-called "Religious Freedom" bill that already passed both state legislatures. The bill would allow businesses in the state to deny service to anyone on religious grounds, with opponents of the bill stating that it would allow businesses to unfairly single out and discriminate against the LGBT community and other groups. Swartout pointed out in the letter that "Gen Con proudly welcomes a diverse attendee base, made up of different ethnicities, cultures, beliefs, sexual orientations, gender identities, abilities, and socio-economic backgrounds" from over 40 countries and all 50 states, and that welcoming such a "wide-ranging diversity has been a key element to the success and growth of our convention", as well as injecting "over $50 million dollars" annually to the local economy. Swartout stated that signing such a bill "will have a direct negative impact on the state economy and factor into [Gen Con's] decision-making on hosting the convention in the state of Indiana in future years," after theIndiana Convention Center had already completed a major expansion in 2011 to accommodate increased attendance to Gen Con.[34][53][54] Pence signed SB 101 into effect on March 26, 2015.[55]
In August 2022 whenIndiana passed a near total ban on abortions, Gen Con tweeted a statement in support of abortion rights, and Gen Con president David Hoppe made the following statement: "Passage of Senate Bill 1 will have an impact on our stakeholders and attendees and will make it more difficult for us to remain committed to Indiana for our long-term home. We are committed here through 2026. We do have to think about what that means beyond that and, of course, we would have to look at what that means for the period up until that time."[56]
Attendance at Gen Con conventions, based on the numbers given below:
| Event | Date | Location | Approximate attendance | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| "Gen Con 0" | August 1967[11] | Gary Gygax's Home Lake Geneva,Wisconsin[11] | 12[a] | |
| Gen Con I | August 24, 1968[11] | Horticultural Hall Lake Geneva, Wisconsin[11] | 96[57][b] | First official year of Gen Con |
| Gen Con II | August 23–24, 1969 | Horticultural Hall Lake Geneva, Wisconsin[11] | 187[58][c][d] | First two-day Gen Con |
| Gen Con III | August 22–23, 1970[11] | Horticultural Hall/Guild Hall Lake Geneva, Wisconsin[11] | 250[59] | |
| Gen Con IV | August 21–22, 1971[60] | American Legion Memorial Hall Lake Geneva, Wisconsin[60] | 300[61] | |
| Gen Con V | August 19–20, 1972[60] | George Williams College Williams Bay, Wisconsin[60] | 200[62] | Gen Con's 5th year |
| Gen Con VI | August 18–19, 1973[60] | Horticultural Hall/Guild Hall/Legion Hall Lake Geneva, Wisconsin[60] | 300[63] | Tactical Studies Rules (a partnership and predecessor of TSR, Inc.) founded later that year.[6] |
| Gen Con VII | August 23–25, 1974[60] | Horticultural Hall/Guild Hall/Legion Hall Lake Geneva, Wisconsin[60] | 350[64] | Dungeons & Dragons published;[6] the first three-day Gen Con |
| Gen Con VIII | August 22–24, 1975[65] | Horticultural Hall/Guild Hall/Legion Hall Lake Geneva, Wisconsin[65] | 900[16] | |
| Gen Con IX | August 20–22, 1976[65] | Horticultural Hall/Guild Hall/Legion Hall Lake Geneva, Wisconsin[65] | 1,300[66] | TSR takes ownership of convention[6] |
| Gen Con X | August 18–21, 1977[65] | Playboy Resort/Horticultural Hall/Guild Hall Lake Geneva, Wisconsin[65] | 2,300[67] | Gen Con's 10th year. First four-day Gen Con |
| Gen Con XI | August 17–20, 1978[68] | University of Wisconsin–Parkside[68] | 2,000[69] | Moved to Parkside location |
| Gen Con XII | August 16–19, 1979[68] | University of Wisconsin–Parkside[68] | >2,000[70] | |
| Gen Con XIII | August 21–24, 1980[68] | University of Wisconsin–Parkside[68] | 4,500[71] | |
| Gen Con XIV | August 13–16, 1981[68] | University of Wisconsin–Parkside[68] | 5,000[72] | |
| Gen Con XV | August 19–22, 1982[68] | University of Wisconsin–Parkside[68] | >3,000[70] | Gen Con's 15th year |
| Gen Con XVI | August 18–21, 1983[68] | University of Wisconsin–Parkside[68] | >3,000[70] | |
| Gen Con 17 | Aug. 16–19, 1984[68] | University of Wisconsin–Parkside[68] | 3,600[15] | |
| Gen Con 18 | August 22–25, 1985[73] | MECCA (Milwaukee Exposition & Convention Center & Arena),Milwaukee, Wisconsin[73] | 5,000[20] | Moved to MECCA |
| Gen Con 19 | August 14–17, 1986[73] | MECCA, Milwaukee, Wisconsin[73] | 5,000[15] | |
| Gen Con 20 | August 20–23, 1987[73] | MECCA, Milwaukee, Wisconsin[73] | 6,500[70] | Gen Con's 20th year |
| Gen Con 21/Origins | August 18–21, 1988[73] | MECCA, Milwaukee, Wisconsin[73] | >10,000[70] | Gen Con andOrigins were run as a single convention this year[74] |
| Gen Con '89 | August 10–13, 1989[73] | MECCA, Milwaukee, Wisconsin[73] | >10,000[75] | |
| Gen Con '90 | August 9–12, 1990[73] | MECCA, Milwaukee, Wisconsin[73] | >12,000[76] | |
| Gen Con '91 | August 8–11, 1991[73] | MECCA, Milwaukee, Wisconsin[73] | >15,000[77] | |
| Gen Con/Origins '92 | August 20–23, 1992[73] | MECCA, Milwaukee, Wisconsin[73] | >18,000[19] | Gen Con's 25th year. Gen Con andOrigins are run as a single convention this year |
| Gen Con '93 | August 19–22, 1993[78] | MECCA, Milwaukee, Wisconsin[78] | 20,000[79] | |
| Gen Con '94 | August 18–21, 1994[78] | MECCA, Milwaukee, Wisconsin[78] | >25,000[79] | |
| Gen Con '95 | August 10–13, 1995[78] | MECCA, Milwaukee, Wisconsin[78] | 30,000[21] | |
| Gen Con '96 | August 8–11, 1996[78] | MECCA, Milwaukee, Wisconsin[78] | 27,000[80] | |
| 1997 Gen Con Game Fair | August 6–10, 1997[78] | MECCA, Milwaukee, Wisconsin[78] | 27,000[80] | Wizards of the Coast purchasesTSR, Inc., gaining control of Gen Con. Gen Con's 30th year |
| 1998 Gen Con Game Fair | August 6–9, 1998[81] | MEC (Midwest Express Center), Milwaukee, Wisconsin[81] | >19,000[82] | Moved to MEC |
| 1999 Gen Con Game Fair | August 5–8, 1999[81] | MEC, Milwaukee, Wisconsin[81] | >22,000[83] | Wizards of the Coast is purchased by Hasbro after the convention. Hasbro now owns Gen Con. |
| 2000 Gen Con Game Fair | August 10–13, 2000[81] | MEC, Milwaukee, Wisconsin[81] | 21,000 (projected)[84] | |
| 2001 Gen Con Game Fair | August 2–5, 2001[81] | MEC, Milwaukee, Wisconsin[81] | 25,000[15] | |
| 2002 Gen Con Game Fair | August 8–11, 2002[81] | MEC, Milwaukee, Wisconsin[81] | 23,000[27] | Gen Con's last year in Wisconsin, 35th year of the convention. Peter Adkison purchases Gen Con from Hasbro. |
| Event | Date | Location | Approximate attendance | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gen Con Indy 2003 | July 24–27, 2003[41] | ICC (Indiana Convention Center),Indianapolis, Indiana[41] | 25,000[27] | |
| Gen Con Indy 2004 | August 19–22, 2004[41] | ICC, Indianapolis, Indiana[41] | 21,741[85] | |
| Gen Con Indy 2005 | August 18–21, 2005[41] | ICC, Indianapolis, Indiana[41] | 25,106[28] | |
| Gen Con Indy 2006 | August 10–13, 2006[41] | ICC, Indianapolis, Indiana[41] | 21,250+[86] | |
| Gen Con Indy 2007 | August 16–19, 2007[41] | ICC, Indianapolis, Indiana[41] | 27,000[87] | 40th anniversary |
| Gen Con Indy 2008 | August 14–17, 2008[88] | Indianapolis, Indiana | 28,600+[89] | |
| Gen Con Indy 2009 | August 13–16, 2009[90] | Indianapolis, Indiana | 27,900+[91] | |
| Gen Con Indy 2010 | August 5–8, 2010 | Indianapolis, Indiana | 30,046[92] | |
| Gen Con Indy 2011 | August 4–7, 2011 | Indianapolis, Indiana | 36,733[93] | |
| Gen Con Indy 2012 | August 16–19, 2012 | Indianapolis, Indiana | 41,000+[94] | 45th anniversary |
| Gen Con Indy 2013 | August 15–18, 2013[95] | Indianapolis, Indiana | 49,058[96] | |
| Gen Con Indy 2014 | August 14–17, 2014[95] | Indianapolis, Indiana | 56,614[95] | |
| Gen Con Indy 2015 | July 30 – August 2, 2015[97] | Indianapolis, Indiana | 61,423[97] | |
| Gen Con Indy 2016 | August 4–7, 2016[98] | Indianapolis, Indiana | 60,819[98] | |
| Gen Con 2017 | August 17–20, 2017[99] | Indianapolis, Indiana | 60,000+[99] | 50th anniversary |
| Gen Con 2018 | August 2–5, 2018 | Indianapolis, Indiana | 61,424+[100] | |
| Gen Con 2019 | August 1–4, 2019 | Indianapolis, Indiana | ~70,000[101] | |
| Gen Con 2020 | July 30 to August 2, 2020 | In-person convention cancelled due to safety concerns over COVID-19, was held virtually instead[102] | ||
| Gen Con 2021 | September 16–19, 2021 | Indianapolis, Indiana | 35,000+[103] | |
| Gen Con 2022 | August 4–7, 2022 | Indianapolis, Indiana | 50,000+[104] | |
| Gen Con 2023 | August 3–6, 2023 | Indianapolis, Indiana | 70,000+[105] | 20th year in Indianapolis, 55th anniversary |
| Gen Con 2024 | August 1–4, 2024 | Indianapolis, Indiana | 71,000+[106] | 50th anniversary ofDungeons & Dragons |
| Gen Con 2025 | July 31-August 3, 2025 | Indianapolis, Indiana | ~72,000[107] |
| Event | Date | Location | Approximate attendance | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gen Con West | September 4–6, 1976[65] | McCabe Hall,San Jose, California[65] | ||
| Gen Con West 77 | September 3–5, 1977[65] | Villa Hotel,San Mateo, California[65] | ||
| Gen Con West 78 | September 2–4, 1978[68] | Villa Hotel,San Mateo, California[68] |
| Event | Date | Location | Approximate attendance | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gen Con South | February 9–11, 1978[68] | Robert Meyer Hotel,Jacksonville, Florida[68] | ||
| Gen Con South | February 17–19, 1979[68] | JAX Hilton, Jacksonville FL[68] | ||
| Gen Con South | February 15–17, 1980[68] | Ramada Inn,Jacksonville Beach, Florida[68] | ||
| Gen Con South | February 6–9, 1981[68] | Ramada Inn, Jacksonville Beach, Florida[68] | ||
| Gen Con South | February 5–7, 1982[68] | Jacksonville Beach Convention Center, Jacksonville Beach FL[68] | ||
| Gen Con South | March 11–13, 1983[68] | Thunderbird Resort, Jacksonville FL[68] | ||
| Gen Con South | March 16–18, 1984[68] | Thunderbird Resort, Jacksonville FL[68] |
| Event | Date | Location | Approximate attendance | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gen Con East I | July 23–26, 1981[68] | Cherry Hill Inn,Cherry Hill, New Jersey[68] | ||
| Gen Con East II | June 17–20, 1982[68] | Widener College,Chester, Pennsylvania[68] |
| Event | Date | Location | Approximate attendance | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| European Gen Con | November 30 – December 2, 1990[73] | Pontin's Holiday Center,Camber Sands,East Sussex, England[73] | ||
| European Gen Con 1991 | November 15–17, 1991[73] | Pontin's Holiday Center, Camber Sands, East Sussex, England[73] | ||
| European Gen Con 1992 | November 13–15, 1992[73] | Pontin's Holiday Center, Camber Sands, East Sussex, England[73] | ||
| European Gen Con 1993 | November 11–14, 1993[78] | Pontin's Holiday Center, Camber Sands, East Sussex, England[78] | ||
| European Gen Con 1994 | May 12–15, 1994[78] | Pontin's Holiday Center, Camber Sands, East Sussex, England[78] | ||
| European Gen Con 1995 | April 27–30, 1995[78] | Pontin's Holiday Center, Camber Sands, East Sussex, England[78] | ||
| European Gen Con 1996 | September 5–8, 1996[78] | Loughborough University,Leicestershire, England[78] | ||
| European Gen Con 1997 | August 28–31, 1997[78] | Loughborough University, Leicestershire, England[78] | ||
| Gen Con Europe | July 31 – August 1, 1999 | Bouwcentrum, Antwerp, Belgium | ||
| Gen Con Paris | April 21–23, 2006[41] | Paris Est Montreuil, Paris, France[41] | 4,000[108] | |
| Gen Con Paris 2007 | May 25–27, 2007[41] | Paris Est Montreuil, Paris, France[41] | 4,200[109] | |
| Gen Con Paris 2008 | April 25–27, 2008 | Paris, France | 9,000[110] |
| Event | Date | Location | Approximate attendance | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gen Con Barcelona 1994 | November 11–13, 1994[78] | Drassanes Reials,Barcelona, Spain[78] | ||
| Gen Con Barcelona 1995 | November 3–5, 1995[78] | Drassanes Reials, Barcelona, Spain[78] | ||
| Gen Con Barcelona 1996 | November 15–17, 1996[78] | Mercat del Born, Barcelona, Spain[78] | ||
| Gen Con Barcelona 1999 | April 9–11, 1999[81] | Cotxeres de Sants, Barcelona, Spain[81] | ||
| Gen Con Barcelona | July 1–4, 2004[41] | Palau Sant Jordi, Barcelona, Spain[41] | (licensed event) |
| Event | Date | Location | Approximate attendance | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gen Con UK 1998 | September 3–6, 1998 | Loughborough University, Leicestershire, England | ||
| Gen Con UK 1999 | September 2–5, 1999[81] | Loughborough University, Leicestershire, England[81] | ||
| Gen Con UK 2000 | August 31 – September 3, 2000[81] | Manchester Conference Centre, Manchester University, England[81] | ||
| Gen Con UK 2001 | August 30 – September 2, 2001[81] | Olympia 2, London, England[81] | ||
| Gen Con UK 2002 | August 29 – September 1, 2002[81] | Olympia 2, London, England[81] | ||
| Gen Con UK 2003 | April 18–21, 2003[41] | Olympia 2, London, England[41] | ||
| Gen Con UK 2004Archived 2011-08-09 at theWayback Machine | October 14–17, 2004[41] | Minehead Butlins,Somerset, England[41] | (licensed event) | |
| Gen Con UK 2005 | November 3–6, 2005[41] | Bognor Regis,West Sussex, England[41] | 1,957[e] | (licensed event) |
| Gen Con UK 2007 | August 30 – September 2, 2007 | Reading, Berkshire, England | 1,746[111] | (licensed event) |
| Gen Con UK 2008 | August 28–31, 2008 | Reading, Berkshire, England | (licensed event) |
| Event | Date | Location | Approximate attendance | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benelux Gen Con 1998 | July 31 – August 2, 1998[81] | Motel Tiel,Tiel, Netherlands[81] | ||
| Gen Con Benelux 2000 | September 23–24, 2000[112] | Den Bosch, The Netherlands[112] | Last Gen Con in theBenelux.[112] |
| Event | Date | Location | Approximate attendance | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gen Con SoCal 2003 | December 11–14, 2003[41] | ACC (Anaheim Convention Center),Anaheim, California[41] | 4,148[113] | |
| Gen Con SoCal 2004 | December 2–5, 2004[41] | ACC, Anaheim, California[41] | 5,559[113] | |
| Gen Con SoCal 2005 | November 18–20, 2005[41] | ACC, Anaheim, California[41] | 6,326[31][113] | |
| Gen Con SoCal 2006 | November 16–19, 2006[41] | ACC, Anaheim, California[41] | 5,840[113] |
| Event | Date | Location | Approximate attendance | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gen Con Australia | July 3–6, 2008 | BCEC (Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre),Brisbane, Queensland, Australia | >10,000[114] | |
| Gen Con Australia | September 18–20, 2009 | BCEC,Brisbane, Queensland, Australia |
Gen Con is scheduled to remain in Indianapolis through 2030.[106][115]
| Event[116] | Scheduled date | Location | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gen Con Indy 2026 | July 30–August 2, 2026 | Indianapolis, Indiana | Gen Con 59 |
| Gen Con Indy 2027 | August 5 – August 8, 2027 | Indianapolis, Indiana | Gen Con 60 |
| Gen Con Indy 2028 | August 3 – August 6, 2028 | Indianapolis, Indiana | Gen Con 61 |
| Gen Con Indy 2029 | August 2 – August 5, 2029 | Indianapolis, Indiana | Gen Con 62 |
| Gen Con Indy 2030 | August 1 – August 4, 2030 | Indianapolis, Indiana | Gen Con 63 |
Gen Con, Indianapolis' largest annual convention in terms of direct visitor spending, reported record attendance for its last trip to town for a while.
Pour infos, cette année entrées payantes + invités, la GenCon a eu un peu plus de 4200 visiteurs. [For your information, this year's paying and invited entries, GenCon had a little over 4200 visitors.]