
Yes, I've done that. Specifically, used Viking proverbs pulled from GURPS Vikings for an essay on Beowulf. Just an epigram, but I was forced to put a role-playing supplement as a reference.
Now, I wouldn't advise students to use GURPS books (or other well-written historical RPG books) as legitimate sources of information. Wiki is probably more reliable (but far less referenceable). After all, they're necessarily more skewed towards creating a world to play in than facts, dates and figures. However, they're great for the little details you wouldn't get in your standard history text. What people ate, how they named their children, and just how much damage a glaive-guisarme might do.
My 5 Favorite University Paper-Enabled RPG books
GURPS Vikings
Taint of Madness for Call of Cthulhu (it's Psychology 101 with 1930s asylum methods!)
GURPS Imperial Rome
Deities & Demigods/Legends & Lore
GURPS Celtic Myth
Yours?
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