mamba
Legend
I understand the OGL 1.1 just fine, it reads ‘stay the heck away from this’The OGL was supposed to be read and understood by laypeople. This appears to be another departure from what has been.
I understand the OGL 1.1 just fine, it reads ‘stay the heck away from this’The OGL was supposed to be read and understood by laypeople. This appears to be another departure from what has been.
will have to be the latter, but I expect them to steer close to 5eis it 5.5 or is it a new system not beholden to the d20 system the ogl or D&D at all?
Yeah, the Supreme Court of Canada is starting to roll their eyes at the English courts now. It used to be that when you cited a decision of the Court of Appeal or H.L. in front of a Canadian court, they would ask counsel why that presumptively would not be followed. It was a very serious question, too.
They don't ask that anymore. After the HL retreated from Anns v. Merton and Canada doubled down on it, we have been increasingly treating the English courts as the old Mum with dementia. After 20 years of "WTF is up with the English?" we don't even ask that anymore, either.
Yes, I can really understand it feels that way. But how much of that feeling do you think is caused by what wizards actually has said, vs what others have claimed or speculated about wizards and what they claim wizards are saying?
FWIW, Erik Mona was apparently breathing FIRE when he rallied the Paizo troops yesterday at an all staff meeting. They were cheering him on via Facebook, too.
Something's up.
I think you are tilting at windmills now. This sort of careful analysis on non-legal language is, ultimately, a waste of effort and glia.OK so I had a look. Macris was trying to parse the text of the FAQ as if it were contract terms, when it's supposed to be explanatory,
The most relevant actual term:
1.ii. Not Usable D&D Content (“Unlicensed Content”) – This is Dungeons & Dragons content that has been or later will be produced as “official” – that is, released by Wizards of the Coast or any of its predecessors or successors – and is not present in the SRD v. 5.1. Unlicensed Content includes things like the most famous Dungeons & Dragons monsters, characters, magic spells, and things relating to the various settings used in Dungeons & Dragons official content over the years – what the old Open Game License referred to as “Product Identity.” Unlicensed Content is NOT covered by this agreement, and You agree not to use Unlicensed Content unless Your use is specifically authorized by a separate agreement with Us. If You want to include that content in Your work, You must go through the Dungeon Masters Guild or other official channels.
OK so I feel increasingly that my initial instinct was right. The new FAQ seems to make pre-5.1 SRD material Unlicensed, and WoTC is focused on getting people to agree they won't use it.
Conversely, they SAY here - in an actual term - that they are talking about Product Identity. PI was pretty restricted in the OGL 1.0, and obviously did NOT cover the contents of the 3e/3.5e/5e SRDs! It does say Unlicensed Content 'includes' PI, with the implication that it goes beyond PI, though. So they seem to be setting up a bait and switch for the unwary, who may think they're only agreeing not to use PI, when really they're agreeing to not use anything outside the 5.1 SRD - including the older SRDs released under the OGL 1.0.
My head hurts now.![]()
Oh, this is great! The definition of "Unlicensed Content" actually are very vague. There are only 2 conditions described. One is that is non 5.1 srd published by wizards, but critically it doesn't say all. That there is not an implied all can also be gathered as that would have made the next part redundant. They then specify that this "include" certain monsters etc, then with a clarifying dash refering to previous ogls PI term. Again they do not say it include "all", when they describe monsters, spells etc, which might be interpreted that there are monsters etc that falls outside "unlicensed content". However the clarifying dash could be interpreted that this modulates which of those "included" categories are actually included, and hence it prohibits all previous PI.Conversely, they SAY here - in an actual term - that they are talking about Product Identity. PI was pretty restricted in the OGL 1.0, and obviously did NOT cover the contents of the 3e/3.5e/5e SRDs! It does say Unlicensed Content 'includes' PI, with the implication that it goes beyond PI, though. So they seem to be setting up a bait and switch for the unwary, who may think they're only agreeing not to use PI, when really they're agreeing to not use anything outside the 5.1 SRD - including the older SRDs released under the OGL 1.0
will have to be the latter, but I expect them to steer close to 5e
Yes, but as have been argued, there are more reasonable interpretations off those two quotes once you put your legalese glaces on ond start reading the context. These quotes were initially leaked and published without the needed context to have any good chance of recognising these alternative in context far more reasonable interpretations.I'm taking the document that's out being something WotC said to at least some people.
And so it kind of feels like it's what WotC said they wanted?
"previously available OGL 1.0(a), which is no longer an authorized license agreement."
"What if I don’t like these terms and don’t agree to the OGL: Commercial? That’s fine – it just means that you cannot earn income from any SRD-based D&D content you create on or after January 13, 2023, and you will need to either operate under the new OGL: NonCommercial or strike a custom direct deal with Wizards of the Coast for your project. But if you want to publish SRD-based content on or after January 13, 2023 and commercialize it, your only option is to agree to the OGL: Commercial"
It feels very implausible to me that the document didn't originate with WotC. And even if they want to take it back, it feels like it proclaims the thinking of some folks pretty high up.