Lyxen
Great Old One
This is for me the critical point, and it makes it obvious why WotC is moving very slowly and changing very few things as they don’t want to kill the golden goose.We really are in uncharted waters.
This is for me the critical point, and it makes it obvious why WotC is moving very slowly and changing very few things as they don’t want to kill the golden goose.We really are in uncharted waters.
We really are in uncharted waters.
Now, imagine what happens if the movie is actually good...
A big reason why Paizo made Starfinder was that they were also planning Pathfinder 2, and they wanted a second source of income both in the year leading up to PF2 (announcing a new edition generally doesn't help sales of the old one) and in case PF2 failed.Just to add onto this a bit, the question would be why. It made sense why Paizo created Starfinder; first of all, they're a smaller company, so smaller gains mean more. Secondly, Starfinder came out in 2017, although probably has roots going back to Distant Worlds in 2012, but it all fits within the paradigm of "We've made it big partially because of 4E's issues, but we need to keep growing."
The license is the same, but the SRD is significantly more hampered. Notably, classes and races only have one sub-version each that's open content. Similarly, there's only one background and one feat in the SRD. Basically, they wanted to make sure it was impossible to Pathfinderize 5e (though we'll see how well Level Up does it).5e uses the same OGL licence as 3e.
Sorry, missed this one at first.I think not starting the discussion with 3rd edition misses critical parts of the picture. 3rd edition was remarkably successful and spurred a renaissance in the tabletop gaming community. A key part of this was the license that allowed other publishers to add to the 3rd edition ecosystem, something never before allowed in D&D. And then Paizo and Pathfinder happened, because of that license. That 4th edition was remarkably restrictive by comparison was no surprise. It also contributed to 4th edition's ultimate failure given the volume of 3rd edition content versus the paucity of 4th edition content. Now we have 5th edition with a somewhat more open license even if it's not quite as open as that of 3rd. And again the 3rd party publishers have come forth to add major content to the game and again the edition is a hit. Heck, the people who run this very site just put out a massively successful Kickstarter campaign for a set of 5th edition compatible books just yesterday.
Bottom line: The availability of content is a huge driver in the success of any edition of D&D.
Every time someone mentions the D&D movie I have quasi-ptsd flashbacks to the 2000 atrocity, one of the only films (maybe the only film) I've ever actually walked out of the theater on.Now, imagine what happens if the movie is actually good...