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News Digest: Controversy Abounds! New Vampire Edition Details, Green Ronin's Talent Search, 7th Sea

Hello everyone! Darryl here with this week’s gaming news! And this week is all about controversy. Vampire: The Masquerade 5th Edition release information (with a controversial hiring), Green Ronin is looking for female writers for Lost Citadel, International Tabletop Day may not be able to meet demand for promotional items, and more! Even this week’s Kickstarters are loaded with controversy!

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Hello everyone! Darryl here with this week’s gaming news! And this week is all about controversy. Vampire: The Masquerade 5th Edition release information (with a controversial hiring), Green Ronin is looking for female writers for Lost Citadel, International Tabletop Day may not be able to meet demand for promotional items, and more! Even this week’s Kickstarters are loaded with controversy!

Okay, this is a very simple story with a very complicated background. I’m going to tell the story first this time and, if you’re not sure what’s going on, I’ll explain more in the next paragraph. White Wolf Publishing announced details about the new edition of Vampire: The Masquerade. This new fifth edition of the game will come out in early 2018 and, according to ICv2, “continue the metagame that was shaped in 2004”. This would be the sourcebook Gehenna which presented several options for the “end of the world” of the World of Darkness and the tie-in novel Gehenna: The Final Night be Ari Marmell. If these events will be rolled into the new edition in an “After the End” manner, it’s not yet known. This project began in controversy after White Wolf announced hiring Zak Smith (aka Zak Sabbath or Zak S) back in February, a man who has been accused of harassing behavior, to work on a video game. WW's response can be found here.

So some of you may be wondering where Onyx Path is in all this. They’re still around, but they’re not involved with this new edition of the game. They are, however, still creating new material for World of Darkness. But not for the new edition. Onyx Path still holds the license for the Chronicles of Darkness (which is the official name of what was called the New World of Darkness titles: Vampire: The Requiem, Werewolf: The Forsaken, etc.) and they hold the license for the 20th Anniversary editions of all the World of Darkness (the official name for Old World of Darkness titles: Vampire: The Masquerade, Werewolf: The Apocalypse, etc.). So Onyx Path is still publishing new material for both of these lines, but are NOT publishing material for the new 5th Edition of Vampire: The Masquerade.

So White Wolf was purchased by CCP Games (makers of the Eve Online franchise) who only wanted the IP rights to make a World of Darkness MMO. After many years of development, the title was finally canceled in 2014 and White Wolf plus all its assets were sold to Paradox Interactive in 2015. Late last year, Paradox Interactive spun White Wolf Publishing into its own (but fully owned) company in anticipation of publishing a new edition. At this time, the licensing deals were restructured and, when the dust settled, the licenses for Chronicles of Darkness and the 20th Anniversary versions of the original World of Darkness games were with Onyx Path and the live-action Mind’s Eye Theater remained with By Night Studios. So this is how White Wolf is coming out with a new edition at a time when Onyx Path is running a Kickstarter for a World of Darkness themed card game.


Green Ronin launched a talent search for contributors to The Lost Citadel roleplaying game, based on the fiction anthology and world developed by Jaym Gates, C.A. Suleiman, and Ari Marmell about a fantasy world in the middle of a zombie apocalypse. There is a catch, as they’re specifically accepting proposals from women. From the announcement:

In the lead-up to June’s Kickstarter for the LCRPG, we are going to be running a talent search for women who are interested in coming to work on the project. If you identify as female and dark fantasy is your jam, we want to see what you can bring to the table! Not to worry, fellas, we have some other opportunities for you coming up later in the year, as well, but this talent search is just for the ladies.

A statement was issued to further clarify that the talent search was also open to those who identify as non-binary gender. The announcement from Green Ronin General Manager Nicole Lindroos comes following a post from Green Ronin President Chris Pramas [EDIT: This post was from Green Ronin General Manager Nicole Lindroos, not Chris Pramas as original posted] speaking about his [EDIT: her] experience on a panel at the DICE Summit in Las Vegas, noting the gender discrepancy of those in the industry and those looking to break in, noting both how far the industry has come and how far it still has to go.


7th Sea promised a platform for user-created content during their wildly successful Kickstarter last year, and now they’ve delivered as Explorer’s Society is live. The online store allows users to create and sell content for the 7th Sea 2nd Edition game, including adventures, NPCs, homebrew rules, or more. There is a content guideline that acts as a license for use of the Intellectual Property, laying out exactly what you can and cannot use from published materials and in what way you’re allowed to use them (this is similar to the license for the DM’s Guild). In the week since launch, there’s already two dozen products available for purchase ranging in cost from free to Pay-What-You-Want to a set price of $3.99 for some of the adventures.


International Tabletop Day has run into a minor issue: The event is so big that they can’t keep up with demand! This is the first year that all promotional items have been released a la carte rather than as a single one-size-fits-all pack. Personally, I preferred the old way, but that’s because I live in a rural area so my local event always had more promotional items than attendees. However, retailers in more populated areas could customize their orders in order to make sure they could meet demand based on previous events. And this year, the demand was higher than ever – so much so that not everyone will be getting their products. Quoted in ICv2, Producer Ivan Van Norman said “We opened up the print sizes significantly as well with publishers, but didn’t know what to expect with the new system. After collecting all the pre-orders we can tell you that you meet and beat the expectations out of the park. Despite opening up numbers significantly, we are at 85-95% fill rate to pre-orders for almost all items for International Tabletop Day.” The only odd one out was the promotional card from Cryptozoic’s Master of Orion, which only had enough product to fill 16% of the orders and cannot be reprinted in time for the event. International Tabletop Day is on Saturday, April 29 and the official website has a locator to find the event closest to you.


Even the Kickstarters this week haven’t managed to evade controversy this week! Alternity is now on Kickstarter bringing a world of science fiction adventure. Technically speaking, however, this is not a new edition of the original Alternity game. Instead, this game takes the abandoned trademarks from the original Alternity and creates an entire new rules system inspired by the original. Some on social media criticized Sasquatch games for using the abandoned trademarks rather than creating an original property. My response: Yeah, how dare this Richard Baker and Bill Slavicsek rip off the hard work of the original Alternity creators, Richard Baker and Bill Slavicsek! And can you believe they’re letting George RR Martin write the next Song of Ice and Fire novel? But more seriously, this new game captures everything from the original Alternity with the original creators involved as they update and streamline the game system bringing in the knowledge of twenty years of advancement in the industry since the original. You can get the core rulebook in PDF for $25, a print version for $40, or a bundle of all content including stretch goals in PDF for $45 or adding on a print copy of the core rulebook for $65. This project is about halfway to its funding goal, but has until Thursday, May 4 to reach its $35,000 goal.

Now for some controversial nepotism! EN Publishing, the game design and publishing arm of EN World, is creating a book of brand new classes for the 5th Edition of “the world’s most popular roleplaying game”. Alchemist, Cardcaster, Diabolist, Feywalker, Morph, Noble, and Occultist are each detailed with multiple subclass builds (see the links for previews). In addition, the book includes new subclasses and build options for the core classes and much more. You can get the PDF version immediately at the end of the Kickstarter for a £10 (about US$13) pledge, or a print copy for £17 (about US$21) for a print copy as soon as it’s printed. This Kickstarter is fully funded and runs until Friday, May 5.

Underworld Races & Classes gives you even more options for your 5th Edition or Pathfinder games from Adventure a Week Games. What’s the controversy with promoting this one? While I’m not directly involved with this project, I am currently working with AAW Games on another project they haven’t announced yet. That said, this book is a collection of new races, classes, spells, and items all themed around the things that dwell beneath the surface of the world, thriving in the darkness. The PDF is available for $25 for your choice of edition or $45 for both with hardcover versions available for $55 or $105 for both. This Kickstarter is fully funded and runs until Friday, April 28.

That’s all from me for this week! Find more gaming news at the EN World News Network website, and don’t forget to support our Patreon to bring you even more gaming news content. If you have any news to submit, email us at news@enworldnews.com. You can follow me on Twitter @Abstruse where I’ve been ranting about the Pepsi controversy (there’s no reason not to bring back Crystal Pepsi permanently!), or you can listen to the archives of the Gamer’s Tavern podcast. Until next time, may all your hits be crits! Note: Links to Amazon and/or DriveThru may contain affiliate links with the proceeds going to the author of this column.
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Darryl Mott

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mxyzplk

Explorer
You are more than welcome to not like Zak, he's a bit of a freak and not for everyone. But the claims he harasses LGBT people etc. are ridiculous, and only creditable by people that don't take more than 5 minutes to look into it. I appreciate you 'citing sources' but linking to something crazy someone says online is not much of a source.
 

Abstruse

Legend
You are more than welcome to not like Zak, he's a bit of a freak and not for everyone. But the claims he harasses LGBT people etc. are ridiculous, and only creditable by people that don't take more than 5 minutes to look into it. I appreciate you 'citing sources' but linking to something crazy someone says online is not much of a source.
I reported that he was accused of doing those things. I cited the sources of those accusations. Those sites also cited their sources with first-hand testimony of harassment or with other evidence. You can claim all you want whether or not he actually did the things he's accused of, but the fact that he was accused is not in question.
 

ccs

41st lv DM
I have been intrigued by Tales of the Lost Citadel and have an interest in submitting a work. However, I'm not female and my gender is neither fluid or non-binary. One of Green Ronin's owners is female, shouldn't her perspective help fight sexism? Both Chris and Nicole are open-minded and good people, why an artificial constraint to find the best story?

Because they're looking for the best story that's written by a woman*? Wasn't that abundantly clear from the write up?

*However the hell you define that nowdays here in 2017....
 

Abstruse

Legend
*However the hell you define that nowdays here in 2017....
Green Ronin is defining it as anyone who identifies as female, non-binary, intersexed, pangender, bigender, and/or agender, based on their clarification.

If you don't understand what that means, a basic answer would be "not a man". It's obviously more complicated than that, but if you understand it's more complicated than that, you probably don't need a definition.
 

Sunsword

Adventurer
I'm not asking you to like it. I don't much like it. I'm pretty sure the women participating don't much like it either. The question is whether or not it's necessary. It's basically a spin on affirmative action, which was a policy in the US as far back as 50 years ago.

No matter how it's spun, to me it implies that Nicole and C.E. are saying that either women can't compete with male authors (which is ridiculous) or that they are not capable of choosing the best writer for the job without their biases overriding talent (which is sad). I don't see it as the better of two evils, I see it as a sad commentary of how far to the left equality can be derailed.

I know that my gaming tables are much more diverse now then the were in 1991, 1997, and 2007. And so is the industry. As someone who runs a small chain of comic and game stores I am proud that females make up about 30% of our customers. Perhaps there is room to grow for females in this industry not because we are inherently sexist, but because we are finding better ways to reach them. I am the father of 3 daughters, they are all fierce competitors and the idea that the creative playing field is not equal isn't palatable to any of them in this instance.
 

ccs

41st lv DM
I support their right to the decision, yet it will affect how I look at their future products. I won't know if GR picked the best idea, their decision casts doubt on that, since 50% of their talent pool has been excluded.

And I would assume they had picked the best idea based upon the criteria/talent pool that they told me they were judging.
 

Sunsword

Adventurer
Because they're looking for the best story that's written by a woman*? Wasn't that abundantly clear from the write up?

*However the hell you define that nowdays here in 2017....

If I were C.E., I'd first be concerned about getting Tales of the Lost Citadel on Amazon and into book stores. Then I would be looking purely for the best stories available with ethnicity and gender having no bearing on that search.

I think adding the statement that non-binary people are welcome to submit is a back door to ease the rules, which is disrespectful and cowardly in it's own right.
 

Abstruse

Legend
...it implies that Nicole and C.E. are saying that either women can't compete with male authors (which is ridiculous) or that they are not capable of choosing the best writer for the job without their biases overriding talent (which is sad).

And if you're as "into" the business as you claim, you know that statement is borderline libelous at worst and unprofessional at a minimum as you're personally insulting the integrity of two established professionals.
 

Caliban

Rules Monkey
My opinion is that this is America, and you can do "talent" contests, writing contests, or almost any kind of contest using whatever criteria you want for the pool of participants, no matter how PC or ridiculous they may seem to others. They are taking submissions, not hiring people.

America's Got Talent, The Voice, any number of Beauty Pageants, bodybuilding competitions, and writing competitions - they all have pretty specific criteria for participating. Sometimes gender is a factor, most of the time it isn't. It's a free country.
 

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