D&D General Is D&D Survey Feedback Read? [UPDATED!]

If you watch a lot of YouTube videos, you may be aware that there's a narrative going around, with 'anonymous' sources that contain Machievellian quotes about how WotC ignores survey feedback, and uses it as some kind of trap to keep discussion off the internet.

We're all unhappy with WotC and its approach to the current licensing situation, and we're all concerned about the fate of the third-party D&D publishing industry which supports hundreds, if not thousands, of creators and small publishers. I'm worried, and afraid for the fate of my little company and those who rely on me to pay their rent, bills, and mortgages.

But it's important to stay factual.

Ray Winninger, who ran D&D until late 2022, said "I left after the first OneD&D feedback was arriving. I know for certain UA feedback is still read."

He went on to say "This is simply false. Before I left WotC, I personally read UA feedback. So did several others. Many, many changes were made based on UA feedback, both quantitative and written. The entire OneD&D design schedule was built around how and when we could collect feedback."

Winninger previously spoke out in support of the OGL movement, after WotC announced their plans in December.

Another WotC employee tweeted, too -- "I read nearly half a million UA comments my first year working on D&D. I was not the only one reading them. I understand the desire to share information as you get it, but this just feels like muckraking."

It's important to stay on the right side of this OGL issue -- and make no mistake, any attempt to de-authorise the OGL is ethically and legally wrong -- but just making stuff up doesn't help anybody.

Benn Riggs, author of Slaying the Dragon: A Secret History of Dungeons & Dragons, chimed in with his own suspicions.

Here is why I am growing more and more suspicious of @DnD_Shorts and their purported source in WoTC. Let's call that source "The Rogue."

1) Getting a source on the record takes time. DnD Shorts is getting commentary incredibly quickly. WoTC's statement came out this morning, and by this afternoon, we know "The Rogue's" thoughts. The statement talks about a survey? "The Rogue" tells us no one will read what we write to the company.

Then there is the logistics. Is "The Rogue" contacting DnD Shorts from WoTC HQ? Doing it from the bathroom? On their lunch break? All while knowing they'd be fired if found out? They don't at least wait to contact DnD Shorts from home?

2) The info provided by "The Rogue" is simply too good. They have mentioned where they work in the company, and directly quoted powerful people within the company. All that means that within WoTC, tracking down "The Rogue" and firing them should take about two hours. Frankly, if "The Rogue" exists, the best proof of it will be when they are fired.

I'm upset about the OGL too, and it's easy to cast doubt on anonymous sources. People have done it to me. So I will say upfront I could be totally wrong about this and if DnD Shorts reads this and curses me for a bastard because they're honest & good & true and I am besmirching them, well I'm sorry.

But something here just feels wrong, and I cannot keep my peace.

And of course, all this fracturing of the 'resistance' only weakens the position of those who are working against the de-authorization of the OGL. The more click-bait nonsense out there, the less seriously anybody takes the real issues which affect real people.

UPDATES! WotC designer Makenzie De Armas has weighed in to describe the survey process:

Hi, actual #WotCStaff and D&D Designer here. I am credited on several UA releases—and I’ve made edits to that content based on both qualitative and quantitative survey results. Let’s walk through what happens behind the scenes of a UA, shall we?

1. We design player-facing mechanical elements that we hope to include in a future product. We then place those mechanical elements into a UA document and release it, to see what our player base at large thinks of it.

2. We release a survey about the UA.

3. The survey information is collated by members of the team. It’s broken down into two parts: quantitative satisfaction expressed as a percentage, and a summary of qualitative feedback trends noticed in the comments.

4. That summary is reported back to the product teams. The designers on the product teams then make edits to the mechanical elements based on the feedback summary.

5. If satisfaction doesn’t meet our quality standards, we’ll rerelease mechanical content in a followup UA.

This is a proven process. Take for example the Mages of Strixhaven UA, where we tried to create subclasses that could be taken by multiple classes. (Fun fact: that was my first UA.) Did we, as studio designers, want that to work? Yes! But it didn’t.

And we learned that it didn’t BECAUSE of the UA process. We learned that it wasn’t something a majority of our players wanted; we also learned what small elements of that design DID bring joy. We salvaged those elements, redesigned them, and put that changed design in the book.

If we didn’t read or listen to feedback, we would have put those polyclass subclasses into the final book, and the product would have been worse for it. Yes, of course we want to know if you like something—we’re game designers! We’re creating something that is meant to be FUN!

And yes, sometimes we get frustrated when people tell us how to do our jobs, or use those feedback opportunities to belittle us; we’re human. But despite all that, we’re still going to listen and always strive to improve. That’s the truth.

They went on to say:

When I say ALL the comments, I mean it in the most literal sense. We have team members who have dedicated WEEKS to diligently reading through feedback. It’s honestly incredible, and I applaud my team members’ work!

Gamehome Con director Alex Kammer added:

Hey everyone. I personally know the guy at Wizards whose job in part is to read and organize all the comments from their surveys. Reasonable OGL talk and demanding action is great. Fallacious hit pieces only cause harm.
 
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Aldarc

Legend
This may have been a massive blunder on D&D Notes' part. D&D Notes may have handed WotC free ammo for misdirection from the OGL. WotC can use this to murky the waters about the D&D Notes regarding other issues, because now the message that comes out of this is "Can what D&D Notes says about this or anything else be trusted?"
 

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The issue with a capital I is definitely the deauthorization of 1.0a. Everything else is just muddying the waters.

Which might be a little bit by design on wizards' part.

Not if the new OGL is actually good too.
It might not be A+ good. But it could be B with * because it will be irrevocable and still allows what 99% 3PP do.
 

Sulicius

Adventurer
I like D&D Shorts. But this incident is really underlining the fact that most YouTubers are not trained journalists.
I do not enjoy him, but I won’t blame him for doing his best on sharing information a acquired about our hobby.

Journalism is hard, and does not go well with the quick moving world of the internet we live in today. We want to be angry before we want to wait to know the details.

But at the end of the day, he earns his bread with clickbait videos and he earned is bread with this unconfirmed information.
 

EzekielRaiden

Follower of the Way
I'll once again share this - a mod on a Discord server I frequent has done freelance work for WotC/D&D and has contacts inside the company still.

According to them, it isn't that nobody reads the responses - it's that that data is restricted to a handful of senior employees who use it selectively to support their own biases. For instance - if a developer wants something in the game and it has 65% support, they'll point to that. If they oppose something that's popular (like the Warlord class) - they will suppress that information.

That kinda seems worse to me.

Of course, I am a rando, paraphrasing someone none of you know, paraphrasing anonymous sources. But for what it's worth, I have no reason to doubt them.
Oh, that's definitely worse. It's one thing to collect the data and then ignore it. At least there, it's only one pretense--that the data matters.

If they collect it, and then genuinely only use it to further their biases, that's a whole other ballgame. It means we cannot trust them to be honest about analyzing or reporting the data. It means literally anything they tell us must be filtered through a lens of, "So what are they hiding? Why aren't they telling us the whole story? What data did they hold back because it was inconvenient or disruptive?"

I was annoyed before. Now I'm upset.
 

EzekielRaiden

Follower of the Way
Not if the new OGL is actually good too.
Do you actually trust them to make one, given their pointed failure to actually say the things that would get back player support? I don't. I trust them to be what they are: a corporation, human only in specific individual people who work there, faceless and heartless as a collective unit. I trust that corporation to prioritize its end-of-year bottom line no matter the cost to reputation, partnerships, or employees.

What do you trust about Wizards of the Coast?

It might not be A+ good. But it could be B with * because it will be irrevocable and still allows what 99% 3PP do.
What, exactly, is in that 99%? What, exactly, would be in the left out 1%?

Because it is, was, and always will be about the legalese. Airily handwaving it as "you'll be able to do 99% of what you currently do" means diddly-squat if that 1% is genuinely vital and the 99% is not that valuable. A replacement of the First Amendment that added a "you can totally be tested for religion before you take federal office" clause (that is, repealing the existing Article VI "no religious test" clause) would not affect 99% of Americans directly, because they aren't actually serving in public office. But it would be a devastating blow against freedom and human rights nonetheless. I am not trying to say that the OGL is nearly as serious as instituting religious tests before someone can serve in government--just that saying "only 1% would be affected!" means nothing without context.
 

Sulicius

Adventurer
Oh, that's definitely worse. It's one thing to collect the data and then ignore it. At least there, it's only one pretense--that the data matters.

If they collect it, and then genuinely only use it to further their biases, that's a whole other ballgame. It means we cannot trust them to be honest about analyzing or reporting the data. It means literally anything they tell us must be filtered through a lens of, "So what are they hiding? Why aren't they telling us the whole story? What data did they hold back because it was inconvenient or disruptive?"

I was annoyed before. Now I'm upset.
Yesterday a few CURRENT designers working ar WotC have told us this is simply not true. The tweets are in this thread.

Why do you choose to trust that information, instead of the one given?
 


EzekielRaiden

Follower of the Way
Yesterday a few CURRENT designers working ar WotC have told us this is simply not true. The tweets are in this thread.

Why do you choose to trust that information, instead of the one given?
Because WotC has already ruined my trust with their opening salvo and their blatantly disingenuous non-pologies?

Because WotC (and, more importantly, Hasbro) is a corporation, and corporations have an extremely serious problem with becoming collusions against the customer?

Because, with something this important on the line, with something where one poorly-phrased line can result in the collapse of the entire effort, I need an extremely high degree of certainty?

Because I paid attention during the D&D Next Playtest, and noticed the incredible lack of nuance, the dogged insistence on certain efforts until it became clear those efforts simply would never be popular (e.g. Mearls' love of slinging fistfuls of dice, only to eventually cave to negative feedback, or the months wasted on "Specialties" that then had to be abandoned and replaced very late in the process), while denying or burying anything that was more popular than expected if it didn't fit their intentions (e.g. their continued refusal to even consider a Warlord class, despite it being more popular than Druid in the one publicly-visible poll they did)?

Because I know how the Paizo PF1e public playtests worked, where they said pretty much exactly the same things, and then literally actually banned people for giving in-depth feedback that showed how flawed the Gunslinger was?

This ain't my first rodeo.
 

Yesterday a few CURRENT designers working ar WotC have told us this is simply not true. The tweets are in this thread.

Why do you choose to trust that information, instead of the one given?
There’s also a designer claiming to have read 500k pieces of feedback in a year, despite that requiring they read 4 bits of feedback per minute for 8 hours per day, 5 days per week. So I’m not really inclined to trust that sort of info.
 


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