News Digest: WotC Releases, M:TG Harassment, Epic Lawsuit, Munchkin Games, and more!

Hello everyone, Darryl here with this week’s gaming news! Wizards of the Coast releases codename release dates for four new products and a statement on harassment in the Magic: The Gathering community, CMON releasing a Munchkin board game, Epic Games files a lawsuit with far-reaching effects for online gaming media, and more!

Hello everyone, Darryl here with this week’s gaming news! Wizards of the Coast releases codename release dates for four new products and a statement on harassment in the Magic: The Gathering community, CMON releasing a Munchkin board game, Epic Games files a lawsuit with far-reaching effects for online gaming media, and more!


Wizards of the Coast sent out solicitations for some yet-to-be-announced products. The Canadian bookseller McNally Robinson has listings for four new D&D products, “Marathon” (a 192 page hardcover “accessory” due on May 29,2018), “Broadway” (a 256 page hardcover “adventure” due September 18, 2018), “Broadway” dice, and “Catacomb (a 256 page adventure due on November 20, 2018). This isn’t new as other products received similar codename-based solicitations such as “Labyrinth” for Tales of the Yawning Portal and “Midway” for Xanathar’s Guide to Everything. This is due to the conflicting needs of mainstream publishing distribution requiring advance listing of products and the marketing department’s wish to have “big reveal” announcements similar to the live stream marathon from this past summer for Tomb of Annihilation closer to the release date so fan talk and speculation is still high when the product actually comes out. That said, let the speculation being!

Magic: The Gathering cosplayer Christine Sprankle announced she would not be attending any events in 2018 and posted that she would be selling her Magic: The Gathering related costumes, props, collectibles, and cards on social media before taking both her Twitter and Instagram accounts private. This follows a long harassment campaign against her orchestrated by YouTuber “MTGHeadquarters” and his channel Unsleeved Media (which is unaffiliated with Wizards of the Coast). Unsleeved Media posted a video denying a targeted harassment campaign against Sprankle before publishing a celebratory video taking credit for forcing her to “quit finally” (the latter video was deleted for violating YouTube’s anti-harassment policy). Twitter accounts for both MTGHeadquarters and Unsleeved Media were similarly banned for harassment policy violations, but both accounts are back online at the time of writing and actively attacking critics. Wizards of the Coast’s Magic: The Gathering team released a statement condemning harassment, but did not address this situation nor did they state any definitive action in this situation. There has been no comment from that Magic: The Gathering team about any punitive actions from the DCI, the official sanctioning body of Magic: The Gathering tournament play.

Video game maker Epic Games filed multiple lawsuits that may have strong repercussions for all aspects of gaming media, one of them against a 14-year-old. Epic Games filed several copyright lawsuits against people posting YouTube videos of their game Fortnite.

For those unfamiliar with the copyright claim process of YouTube, here is what normally happens. A copyright holder can file a claim either manually by contacting YouTube or through the automated ContentID system. The content creator (that is, the person who posted the video to YouTube) can appeal the decision, which requires a response from the original claimant (the person requesting the takedown or demonetization) which may or may not include a manual review from YouTube. If the claimant responds within 30 days and continues to claim the video is a violation of copyright, the content creator can contest this again which then takes the issue out of the hands of YouTube, who requires that any further attempts to place a copyright claim on the video proceed through legal action.

Epic Games made the claim that they “must” sue or else they will lose their copyright (which is not true under United States intellectual property law, as that is a function of trademark law and not copyright law). Epic Games released a statement to both Polygon and Kotaku:

This particular lawsuit arose as a result of the defendant filing a DMCA counterclaim to a takedown notice on a YouTube video that exposed and promoted Fortnite Battle Royale cheats and exploits. Under these circumstances, the law requires that we file suit or drop the claim. Epic is not okay with ongoing cheating or copyright infringement from anyone at any age. As stated previously, we take cheating seriously, and we’ll pursue all available options to make sure our games are fun, fair, and competitive for players.

Laura Rogers, the mother of the 14-year-old sued by Epic Games, filed a letter to the court dismissing all of the claims and pointing out the multiple legal flaws in the case by Epic Games.

This is one of at least three lawsuits filed by Epic Games, and it may have strong repercussions for online media and gaming. If any of the lawsuits are successful, it will set the first court precedent that Let’s Play videos and live streams of video games are not covered under Fair Use. Currently, it is a legal grey area because it may or may not meet the legal requirements of “Criticism” or “Transformative Work” considered under Fair Use. We don’t know for sure because no game company has decided to actually go through with a lawsuit, even though some companies have made threats in the past, most famously this year Altus Games threatening anyone streaming or posting videos of Persona 5. With reports that as many as half of current Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition players being exposed to the game through online media and the “Tabletop Effect” of board games featured on Wil Wheaton’s webseries Tabletop receiving massive sales boosts, any lawsuit affecting the ability of online media to showcase games could have a startling effect on the tabletop gaming industry.

Dice Tower host and co-founder Tom Vasel claimed in an interview that Dice Tower was “uninvited” from the GAMA Trade Show. GAMA Executive Director John Ward replied by stating that no media have been invited yet as the press list has not been finalized. The GAMA Trade Show will be in Reno, NV, from March 12-16 next year and is, as the title suggests, a trade show for industry insiders for business-to-business promotion and networking rather than a traditional fan convention, so press attendance is by invitation only. This follows previous tension between the game manufacturing trade group and Vasel following a video posted earlier this year arguing against the promotion of brick-and-mortar game retailers, especially as the Dice Tower’s network of podcasts and videos are sponsored by online retailer Cool Stuff Inc., which was not disclosed in the original video.

Steve Jackson Games and Cool Mini or Not entered into a partnership to produce Munchkin board games. The press release stated that the first game under this license will come out in Fall of 2018 and will be inspired by CMON’s Arcadia Quest dungeon exploration game. Munchkin artist John Kovalic stated that he will be “working closely” with CMON on the art for the game. Kovalic then spent most of yesterday coming up with hypothetical Hamilton-themed Munchkin cards with Twitter users, though no license has been announced on that front. Yes, that last sentence was superfluous to the story, but come on, you know you want it! Start writing Lin-Manuel Miranda!

The Worldbuilders fundraiser is still going on raising money for Heifer International. The charity fundraiser from fantasy author and Acquisitions Inc. party member has already raised more than $350,000 to benefit the organization. Each $10 pledge gets you one entry into a prize drawing at the end of the campaign for currently over 5000 different prizes including games, books, memorabilia, and more with further entries on the charity’s team pages for their giveaways. Rothfuss is also hosting live stream events on his Twitch page (discloser: I am a moderator for Pat’s Twitch page as a volunteer) every weeknight during the fundraiser from 4PM to 7PM Central time, and there will be a StarCraft tournament kicking off on December 4 featuring teams from Geek & Sundry, The Doubleclicks, Paul & Storm, Cards Against Humanity, and more. During the fundraiser event, 100% of every donation is going directly to Heifer International. The fundraising drive continues until Friday, December 8.


Flash Gordon RPG for Savage Worlds. I may be showing my age a bit, but I’m curious if Pinnacle had to pay a license fee to Queen as well, because every time this game has crossed my social media, the first thing I hear is ♪FLASH! AAAAaaaa!! Savior of the Universe!!♪ The game is based on the classic pulp series of novels, comics, cartoons, film serials, and more of science fiction-adventure that is probably the perfect match for the Savage Worlds system. And, thanks to stretch goals, they’ve even gotten actor Sam J. Jones (who played Flash Gordon in the 1980 film) to write the forward. You can receive the core rulebook in PDF for a $20 pledge, add on a digital copy of the GM’s book for $45, or upgrade to print copies for $45 and $100 respectively, and a full boxed set including both limited edition print books, dice, maps, bennie tokens, and more for $175. This project is fully funded and runs until Monday, December 4. Note that a copy of the Savage Worlds core rules are required to play and not included. I’m going to have that song in my head all day…

Changeling: The Lost 2nd Edition from Onyx Path is a rules and publishing update for the Fae-focused roleplaying game in the Chronicles of Darkness line. The book brings the rules up-to-date and in-line with previous updates for Vampire: The Requiem, Werewolf: The Forsaken, and Mage: The Awakening while presenting the over 300 page rulebook with a quality embossed hardcover edition. The PDF is available for a $25 pledge and the hardcover available for $50, and there are multiple pledge levels with more expansions, fiction, and other games in the Chronicles of Darkness line. This project is fully funded with many stretch goals left to unlock before it funds on Thursday, December 14.

That’s all from me for this week! Find more gaming crowdfunding news at the EN World RPG Kickstarter News 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 I’ve been talking a lot about Star Trek and have no idea why and that’s not me being coy about an announcement or anything it’s just come up a lot recently for some reason, follow Gamer’s Tavern on YouTube featuring videos on gaming history and Let’s Plays, 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, Humble Store, Humble Bundle, and/or DriveThru may contain affiliate links with the proceeds going to the author of this column.
 

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Darryl Mott

Darryl Mott

Dire Bare

Legend
Wow. Lots of folks wishing ill towards a 14 year old.

Did the kid screw up? Probably. Does he and his family deserve a lawsuit? For cheating and creating a video of it? God, no.

The lawsuit is ridiculous, as is the "Kid deserves it, rotten cheater!" sentiment expressed here by some.
 

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Shasarak

Banned
Banned
he is 14 years old and live in the only state that has no maximum liability for children: his parents have to pay up the damages. And yes, he did mess up, his parents did not supervise him properly so gd be dammned: He is responsible for ruining a game to some degree, so he shall be punished. Being 14 years is NO excuse to ruin the gaming experience of thousands.

I would have imagined being 14 years old is all the excuse you need to ruin the gaming experience of as many people as you can.
 

Destro

First Post
The particulars of this lawsuit have absolutely no relevance to the RPG/tabletop genre beyond the tangential. As the author noted, WotC and the industry at large have seen a huge boost from these online communities.
They might try to assert their IP rights if some streamer starts promoting and playtesting something shady, like temporary hit points for cocaine use or a campaign to establish PC's as brothel owners.
 


fantasmamore

Explorer
What is wrong with you people? A company sues a 14 year old kid over a video and you somehow seem to be "okay" with it? I don't even care what the video was about, I only want is to find what games this company produces so that I will never buy them! Let them make money by suing children, I don't care, I am making a statement about how I want the game companies to treat their customers. Now, let's google this "epic games"...
 

ddaley

Explorer
Wow. Lots of folks wishing ill towards a 14 year old.

Did the kid screw up? Probably. Does he and his family deserve a lawsuit? For cheating and creating a video of it? God, no.

The lawsuit is ridiculous, as is the "Kid deserves it, rotten cheater!" sentiment expressed here by some.

I don't see much ill will towards him.... but it is hard to be sympathetic

“I was basically cheating in the game Fortnite,” Rogers said, after which he proceeds to plug the website where he downloaded the cheat multiple times. His ad hoc defense is that the cheats are freely available and “:):):):)ing everywhere.” Therefore, Rogers said, his actions should be excused.


“I’m not in any way trying to ruin the community for fun,” Rogers said. “I’m just trying to do everything for fun. I cheat for fun. I don’t cheat to cheat, to win, to get good at the game. I just cheat for fun.”
 

ddaley

Explorer
What is wrong with you people? A company sues a 14 year old kid over a video and you somehow seem to be "okay" with it? I don't even care what the video was about, I only want is to find what games this company produces so that I will never buy them! Let them make money by suing children, I don't care, I am making a statement about how I want the game companies to treat their customers. Now, let's google this "epic games"...

They gave him the opportunity to take down his video. He responded by filing a counter claim

Reached for comment, Epic Games said that the lawsuit stems not from Rogers using the cheat but for publishing what amounts to a how-to guide promoting it on his YouTube channel. When Epic Games issued a DMCA takedown notice, Rogers chose to contest it. That puts Epic in the position of having to push back to protect its own rights.


“This particular lawsuit arose as a result of the defendant filing a DMCA counterclaim to a takedown notice on a YouTube video that exposed and promoted Fortnite Battle Royale cheats and exploits,” Epic told Polygon. “Under these circumstances, the law requires that we file suit or drop the claim.

The music/entertainment industry sued lots of minors. Did you complain about that?
 

aramis erak

Legend
They're not suing the people who made the cheating software or who run the servers that allow cheating. They're suing people who made YouTube videos about the cheating.

Also, I'm going to repeat this again: Cheating in a game is not illegal. I don't care how much it personally annoys you, it doesn't change the fact that you can't sue someone for it.

Technically, in the US, you can (in most localities) actually file suit for/over anything, even things which are blackletter legal. The gatekeeper is the judge in pretrial motions; if the judge thinks it frivolous, knows it to violate existing law (and doesn't want to push the issue for the appellate process), or knows caselaw precedent that points towards summary rejection. And, even if the judge doesn't, if the defense does and points them out to the judge, again, done. There are literally hundreds of inane lawsuits filed weekly - most of which die by summary dismissal. In running "Frivolous Lawsuits Dismissed in 2017" I got several thousand non-overlapping just from three of the hundreds of hits.

So, they can file. And maybe make a press splash. Unless the judge wants to make headlines for it, if the kid's parents get a decent lawyer, it's likely to get tossed quickly. And a countersuit filed to recover court costs an attorney fees.

Also, there the issue of contract law enforceability. States set minimum ages for being able to enter into binding contracts on a state by state basis; if the kid's below that age for his state, he theoretically can't be held to the TOS.
 

ddaley

Explorer
Technically, in the US, you can (in most localities) actually file suit for/over anything, even things which are blackletter legal. The gatekeeper is the judge in pretrial motions; if the judge thinks it frivolous, knows it to violate existing law (and doesn't want to push the issue for the appellate process), or knows caselaw precedent that points towards summary rejection. And, even if the judge doesn't, if the defense does and points them out to the judge, again, done. There are literally hundreds of inane lawsuits filed weekly - most of which die by summary dismissal. In running "Frivolous Lawsuits Dismissed in 2017" I got several thousand non-overlapping just from three of the hundreds of hits.

So, they can file. And maybe make a press splash. Unless the judge wants to make headlines for it, if the kid's parents get a decent lawyer, it's likely to get tossed quickly. And a countersuit filed to recover court costs an attorney fees.

Also, there the issue of contract law enforceability. States set minimum ages for being able to enter into binding contracts on a state by state basis; if the kid's below that age for his state, he theoretically can't be held to the TOS.

I think people are glossing over and trivializing what this kid did. He is showing people how to violate the ToS for the game and how to go about cheating in the game. This can lead to real, monetary damages for the company. This lawsuit isn't about preventing people from posting videos of gameplay.
 

GreyLord

Legend
I was ignorant of his stuff and this going on before this, as I was not a Magic Player. I do not know the backstory, and didn't really get enough to really understand what was going on from the short paragraph in the article above. I thus decided to do some research on it. Some of the stuff I found...not that I'm any better at elaborating then the ENworld article was (and probably am worse).

I wish there was someway to view what was actually said in the videos by the guy who Sprankle states was one of the primary reasons she felt harassed. One of the first things I did to try to see what was going on with this was to try to find things in this regards...and it is INCREDIBLY hard to find evidence pointing one way or the other at this point. All I've found in most cases are videos that are in response to one claim or the other and thus released in the past week, but without the hard evidence to support one side or the other.

Seeing those videos would be interesting to see how they hold up in regards to her claims. IT DOES appear there is an actual hard harassment campaign against the guy right now going on (they call him MTGHQ, which must have been the name of his channel prior to it being called UnsleevedMedia which right now is full of his counterclaims in response...but no evidence one way or the other, and another channel he has called the Quartering), which is actually irony I think. It is pretty good evidence that he's being directly harassed himself at this point by one or two individuals.

The thing I'm trying to figure out is her claims. She states it has been going on for at least a year, but as per the things about the MTGHQ guy, it seems his video which is the controversial one that I can't see was only out for 6 months. That doesn't add up...but there is something DID notice.

I didn't find direct harassment of the lady who quit the cosplay scene (and it probably is because all those videos were removed, which makes it very hard to validate), but I did find that on his channel thequartering (as opposed to the channel lit up in the above EN article of MTGHQ...my first search was there, and that was a dead end, but the quartering is a gold mine of this stuff) a BUNCH of things which could be considered offensive to many, such as naming individuals (which could later be harassed by followers), a misunderstanding of how Transgender works in regards to hormone levels and other aspects of being Transgendered (and hopefully I utilized the terms correctly there, I apologize if I used them incorrectly) which leads to incorrect assumptions and insulting statements, as well as other such things.

One of his videos from that channel is linked to in the Polygon article, but there are MANY others, so much so that I get the impression that while his MTGHQ is more of a magic channel, his The Quartering account is basically a political rant channel. He calls a majority of Magic Players some rather insulting ideas as well and implies that while many others are these things, he is such a thing as an alpha male or at least not a beta male (and...just in case anyone is wondering, my personal input is that this entire alpha and beta thing is BS, it was shown that the idea taken from wolves is BS as such a thing doesn't actually exist).

I can see a definite pattern on his part in his The Quartering account/channel, and in fact, I have to wonder why this guy even plays MTG as he seems offended by a majority of the community as per his Quartering account. It is one loooong ensuing rant which probably would make a LOT of our community uncomfortable whether you play Magic or not.

So, while I can't find a targeted a campaign against her (as I said, possibly because those videos were taken down), but I can say that one of his accounts shows signs of symptomatic attitudes of oppression towards women, gamers, and those who he may not politically agree with. It could be that in addition to the videos that have been taken down directly attacking her, that the attitude of his channel could have added onto the feeling that constantly could remind her of the aggression that played a part.

PS: Of interest, I think this stuff has actually added to the number of hits on his channels. The videos linked to in polygon have a higher number of hits then his other videos on average. Just a heads up of something to consider for those who go looking for what this was all about and the actual story behind it like I did. By watching these, we may inadvertently, even if we do not mean to, be supporting him in a weird way because he is getting higher hits on some of his more controversial videos at this point. Something I did not consider before trying to find this stuff, but on reflection realize it now. Something to think about and consider when looking for more information on this.
 

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