• NOW LIVE! Into the Woods--new character species, eerie monsters, and haunting villains to populate the woodlands of your D&D games.

Alright, so level with me...


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The GSL is quite different. Roughly speaking, it doesn't license the reproduction of any text in which WotC holds the copyright. It is basically a trademark (and affiliated product identity) licence, and in that respect therefore more comparable to the D20 licence (and like the D20 licence, and like most trademark licences, it is not in perpetuity). Once WotC no longer wishes to use the trademarks in question, I'm pretty sure it will pull the GSL, as it won't want others to be trading under those marks either. But this will have only modest implications for any trying to clone 4e - either with or without the GSL, the issue with cloning 4e is not mostly a trademark issue (though that could perhaps come up if you copied the WotC stat blocks very closely) but rather a copyright issue.

@Frylock wrote some good blogs about this a year or two ago.

Given the number of "Unauthorised strategy guides" that were produced for computer games in the 90s, I'm not sure that even pulling the GSL would do a hell of a lot to people who want to produce material for 4e. (And yes, I've been vaguely looking into an idea for this). Am I wrong?
 



Given the number of "Unauthorised strategy guides" that were produced for computer games in the 90s, I'm not sure that even pulling the GSL would do a hell of a lot to people who want to produce material for 4e. (And yes, I've been vaguely looking into an idea for this). Am I wrong?


Well, the other thing they did with 4E to help prevent retro-cloning down the line was extensively use specific naming conventions that would present copyright and trademark protections once the GSL is revoked. With early versions, there were only a handful of creature names and major characters names that are off limits under the OGL. With 4E, I cannot even begin to guess how many combat maneuvers, spells, and other things have names that would present stumbling blocks toward cloning.
 
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There's no particular puzzle about how you publish 4e support GSL-less: you just don't reproduce copyrighted text, or try to use WotC's trademarks in the course of your own trade.

Using the OGL might also help, if some of what you want to reproduce is included in the d20 SRD and hence licensed under the OGL.

I don't actually have any Goodman 4e products - how do they format monster/trap stat-blocks?
 

Hrm, am I missing something or is there a contradiction here?
As I posted upthread, and just above this one, there is no problem with producing 4e support provided that you respect WotC's intellectual property rights.

It might be hard to produce a 4e clone (including classes, powers, etc) without violating their rights, but I assume that Sasquatch Game Studio is not doing that.
 

Into the Woods

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