The picture don't show up for me, what am I doing wrong?
All I get is the block with the little x in the upper left corner.
If you downloaded it to your computer, and are trying to view it when you're offline, you won't see them because the images come from WotC's website (the reason it's legal). In short, you need to be online to see the pictures.
If you are already online when trying to look at it, I have no idea why you're not getting them.
Does anyone still have the 3.0 zip file anywhere? My hard drive crashed, and I'd like to get that convienience back again.
I don't see the zip file, but all the files is still on opengamingfoundation.org/srd.html IIRC
AR
__________________
maturity consists in having rediscovered the seriousness one had as a child at play - Nietszche Ask any man what they’d do in the event of a zombie plague and their face will light up. They’ll go on and on about how they’d drive around in their pickup truck lopping off zombies’ heads with a samurai sword. - Jedidiah "Jed" Kirchner, Something Awful
Has anyone heard from Scott, the fellow who runs the 3.5srd.com site? I've had emails in to him for about a month now with no answer -- I have a d20 Modern SRD much like the Sovelior D&D one ready to go and he said he'd host it but I haven't heard from him in a while so...
It was up half an hour ago - it may just be a glitch...?
... ah.
"Bandwidth Limit Exceeded
The server is temporarily unable to service your request due to the site owner reaching his/her bandwidth limit. Please try again later."
-Hyp.
Last edited by Hypersmurf; 29th January 2004 at 03:26 AM..
yeah, I just found that it was down. Did anyone download the Sovelior html version? (I knew I should have downloaded it instead of continuing to pound on 3.5srd.com)
yeah, I just found that it was down. Did anyone download the Sovelior html version? (I knew I should have downloaded it instead of continuing to pound on 3.5srd.com)
Why have WOTC, or D20, or Hasbro - or who whoever it is - decided to put abstracts of their rules into the public domain? What's the rationale behind it? In what way do they hope to benefit? Could someone explain to me what SRD all about.
Actually, they didn't put them in the Public Domain. Even the SRD are copyrighted material.
They just grant you permission to use them as long as you use the Open Game License and abide by the terms of said license. IOW, you can't use the SRD material without the OGL. If you do, Wizards can sue you under the standard copyright law.
As for the rationale? If they allow publishers to make use of their ruleset, they got a network of publishers helping out their sales of PHB or any core game books by Wizards. Kinda like the computer platform/software model. Microsoft releases codes so that folks from Electronics Arts or LucasArts can make Windows-compatible games for us to play. After all, you can't rely on Microsoft to make great games.
Okay, so their Age of Empire is one of Microsoft's great games.
__________________ Anyhoo, just some random thoughts...
My philosophy is "you don't need me to tell you how to play -- I'll just provide some rules and ideas to use and get out of your way." --Monte Cook
Does anybody know if there's currently an initiative to get the Epic SRD into Sovelio's excellent rendition?
AFAIK there is no epic SRD to begin with. So we had to make a petition to make an Epic SRD first.
__________________ Thoughts in Kae'Yoss
Quote:
Erik Mona:
Our new world is large enough to handle several styles of play, including this one.
There's really no reason to force everyone into playing the same campaign. Every DM has different tastes, and a good campaign setting allows him to find something that speaks to him and to his play style.
The Pathfinder Chronicles campaign setting is all about options, not about dictating a single way to play D&D.
Last edited by Kae'Yoss on Wealday, Sarenith 23, 4707 AR at 10:59 AM. Reason: Late Unpleasantness