[quote name='MSUHitman']Thanks for correcting me, although can I at least say they're one of the founders of choice in games and still be accurate?[/QUOTE]
Hm.
It is easy for me to say something stupid and misleading, so I shall take care with my words.
First, when you say "choice", I am interpreting that as "player agency over
narrative and
characterization". "Equip the sword or equip the bow" is a choice, but I don't think that's the kind of thing you're talking about. Going to the eagle level or the ship level in Golden Axe is a choice, but that's also not what you mean. You have a billion choices to make in a game like X-Com, but again, different kind of choice.
Now, player agency over narrative and characterization is considered one of the defining parts of a WRPG (though there are

tons of counter-examples). They have their heart in traditional pen-and-paper RPGs, which allow far more room for player agency than any computer game. Player agency is effectively infinite, limited only by the players themselves and their GM.
With that as their
origin, many early RPGs were
boring and bland as all 
. Generic dungeon crawlers and number-crunchers. Though it is impossible for a conventional PC/console game to equal the amount of player agency offered by a "proper RPG", they did eventually start trying to play catch-up. As such, I can't really say that there
is such a thing as a "founder" (or group of founders) of "choice in videogames". They're not so much cutting a path through dense forest as they are trying to follow a winding deer-trail.
I think I managed to not

anything up in those paragraphs. A bit more in-depth on player agency in Baldur's Gate, its predecessors, contemporaries, and successors in a while. I think I'm-a go get some ice cream right now.
EDIT: God

ing damn you Cheapy, I've said it before, and I'll say it again: the size of the "

" graphic utterly

s the appearance and flow of multiple paragraphs. Even though I put proper paragraph breaks in, everything looks like one giant, double-spaced ramble because the "

" graphic is a few pixels too tall. Calice d'hostie.
EDIT2: Haha,

making another post.