Yaarel
🇮🇱 🇺🇦 He-Mage
If Weird Wizard goes ORC, I am highly interested.The immediate next one I am curious about will be Shadow of the Weird Wizard and whether Schwalb goes with the ORC license
If Weird Wizard goes ORC, I am highly interested.The immediate next one I am curious about will be Shadow of the Weird Wizard and whether Schwalb goes with the ORC license
grandfathered into 1.0a? That would be self-defeating as they cannot produce any new products for it once WotC revokes 1.0a.The other side of that coin is if they rush to publish even the SRD by itself they can later revise and reprint it without issue as it will be grandfathered in. Likely.
Small point, but terminology which annoys every lawyer in the history of ever...
illegal: an act which is contrary to the criminal law and for which you can be fined or imprisoned (or both);
unlawful: an act contrary to law, be it public or private (including a contract), that is NOT something you can be fined or imprisoned for.
Often people say "illegal" when what they actually mean is "unlawful". So now you know.
Not really. Anything printed under 1.0a can keep being printed and revised. Anything that’s compatible with that but doesn’t directly need the OGL, like an adventure, doesn’t actually need the OGL. But yes. The OGL is dead. Long live the ORC.grandfathered into 1.0a? That would be self-defeating as they cannot produce any new products for it once WotC revokes 1.0a.
They will need to release it under the ORC license
I'm sure Black Flag and other systems will be very close to 5e. It will probably be like the retroclone scene, where there are several b/x+houserules games. But I don't think they will advertise themselves as compatible with 5e as they do now, both because that might get them into legal trouble but also because now it makes more sense to build different, anti-wotc branding ("uses the ORC" etc). Long term I think this is a loss for wotc but it seems to be what they are going for--to build distance between the hobby and their walled garden.They can't really "stop" D&D compatible content, as much as they want too. It's a Gray area but for close to 50 years other companies have made "D&D compatible content". Things can be made "not using D&D words" easy enough.
Time will tell, but I doubt thisThey're going to make D&D-compatible stuff, slap "5E" on the cover in a huge logo and "Compatible with the world's most popular role-playing game" or even "Compatible with Dungeons & Dragons".
I mean, that's an irrational thing to doubt, imho.Time will tell, but I doubt this
Well, remember this is NOT about 5E. 5E is over and dead. Coming is 6E, D&D One Next, or whatever. Once 6E is out, they don't want 3PP content for THAT.well, I will ignore the court case in my reply, but I’d much rather no one created anything for 5e any more than trying to make a living in the ruins of the OGL. Move on to Pathfinder, Shadow of the Demon Lord or literally anything else. Not sure how feasible that is from an earnings perspective, but right now clinging to 5e does not feel like such a great choice either in that regard
Move on and rebuild, no point living under the thumb of WotC
The market is different, but not in the way WotC want it to be.This is really just a repeat of the strategy they employed for 4e. It's easy to think that the result will be the same, but the market is different now than it was then, as is the technology that will be central to WotC executing on this strategy.
I'm sorry, but I'm very skeptical that WotC's data is proving useful to them, given their decision-making.Before 5e, I'd say they were critical, now, I honestly don't know. But I think it's clear what WotC believes (and let's face it, they have a mountain of data between DDB and 8 years of surveys and product sales to base their assumptions on).
anything like a monster manual, new classes, etc. sounds like it would need to be under the same license though (or 2.0…), it will have to be ORC, it cannot be OGL for the intended goalNot really. Anything printed under 1.0a can keep being printed and revised. Anything that’s compatible with that but doesn’t directly need the OGL, like an adventure, doesn’t actually need the OGL. But yes. The OGL is dead. Long live the ORC.