===Wiki Participants=== == Eric Harshbarger== [[http://www.ericharshbarger.org|Eric Harshbarger]] did not first ask the question about the existence of Go First Dice; rather he was the first //asked// about them (by game-designer friend James Ernest in 2010). He and friend Robert Ford soon discovered early results. Over the next decade Eric continued intermittent research on the topic, and has served as an organizer and curator of the results obtained by himself and others who have been interested in the topic. ==Michael Purcell== Michael has been interested in permutation-fair dice since first seeing them for sale online. He has worked on the problem of finding new sets of permutation-fair dice for more than four players since 2021. ==Carl Hoff== Carl has been interested in Go First Dice since seeing Eric Harshbarger's G4G10 presentation on the topic back in 2012. He made 3D models of Michael Purcell's 5d120 permutation-fair set. Most recently, with contribution from Henry Segerman (numeral design) and Paul McGuire (numerical balancing) he made 3D models of Paul Meyer's 5d60 permutation-fair set, which is being produced by The Dice Lab. ==James Grime== James Grime and Brian Pollock found a set of five 60-side place-fair dice in 2014. James wrote up the details of the binary and inductive constructions for Recreational Mathematics Magazine 017 (January 2023). ==Paul Meyer== Paul Meyer was first introduced to Go First Dice by James Grime's Numberphile video on the topic in April 2023. Paul then found the first permutation-fair 5d60 set in July 2023.