Greg Benage
Legend
No.Did you also once think Pathfinder 1 was a "heartbreaker"?
No.Did you also once think Pathfinder 1 was a "heartbreaker"?
If this is correct, they completely and utterly missing the point.The Opening Arguments podcast will devote their episode to the OGL story this Friday.
OA’s Twitter indicates they are absolutely not on the side of open gaming.
Seriously: they think WotC is perfectly within their rights to change the license. They think WotC always intended to be able to change the license however they wanted. They think OGL 1.1 is no big deal—they even imply it’s better because it’s “kind of insane” that WotC doesn’t already get a cut of Pathfinder. And at worst, OA claims, “if you’re a niche commercial creator, you will probably have to talk to WotC.” This is all a “moral panic” based on (among other things) “bad contract-reading.” The Gizmodo article is “virtually fact-free” and filled with deliberately misleading “fearmongering”; fans should turn their pitchforks on the article’s author.
Yet Pathfinder came into existence because WotC chose a similar path to what they're choosing now.
You mean the biggest poodlestorm ever in the entire history of ttrpgs?They are waiting to see if the storm will die down.
Too late for that, the trust is already gone.What else should they do?
Backpaddeling and telling us they are sorry is needed.
They can't mend the damage just by saying they won't change the OGL 1.0(a)Exactly. I dont do grudge, it cost too much energy.
If they came out with an apology saying:
''sorry, we did not realize the reach of our actions, what benefits our brand cant be the only the only justification when you are an industry leader. We've burned bridges with our esteemed community which is the foundation of the game and we want to apologize for it. D&D is your game and we are the caretaker of of it; in the past week, we've failed our duty. Trying to mend our relationship will take time and we'll try our utmost to do so. Know that the OGL will stay intact; we'll contact our leading partners creating under the OGL to see what we can do for them. yadayada''
I'd be ok. And the next time they try to pull the same crap? Well we'll sharpen the pitchforks once more until they apologize once again.
yepRegardless of what WotC eventually says, I have to imagine the morale on the D&D team is at a historic low. This is likely a dream job for many of them, getting to work on designing a D&D edition, and it's been utterly ruined by the clowns upstairs.
Tell that to the last solid week of everyone arguing about whether or not WotC has the legal right to change or terminate 1.0a because it's the kind of thing that needs to be decided by a court.Nobody (nobody that counts anyway) disputes WotC's legal right to change or terminate the license.
In my opinion, shared with Ryan Dancey, Pathfinder succeeded because it was more "D&D" than 4e was (to enough people to split the market, at least). As soon as that was no longer the case (5e), D&D claimed the lion's share of those customers back. Ryan called 4e the "fantasy heartbreaker."Yet Pathfinder came into existence because WotC chose a similar path to what they're choosing now.
I think you have to be consistent. If the 3PPs were going to be worse off because revocation of the OGL forced them out of the D&D ecosystem, then they're also going to be worse off because this incident has scared them away from the D&D ecosystem.And you still choose to dismiss upcoming games as heartbreakers? You must be just as smart as the bigwigs over at WotC!![]()
Pretty much everyone disputes (not necessarily repudiates, but disputes) WotC's right to terminate 1.0a, and the only change that is possible is by creating a new version of the OGL, which, according to the OGL 1.0a, doesn't do anything to the OGL 1.0a.Nobody (nobody that counts anyway) disputes WotC's legal right to change or terminate the license.