Ginny Di interviews WotC's Kyle Brink

Continuing the D&D executive producer's interview tour, gaming influencer Ginny Di asks a WotC's Kyle Brink about the OGL and other things.

 

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I dunno, man. I'm not a 3PP, but I do own a small business (not related to the hobby). And I'm telling you right now, if a company betrayed me to that extent and put me in grave fear for my livelihood, there's no way I'd ever trust them again. Even if the current people do everything right, who's to say the next people won't pull the exact same stuff a few years down the road?
That was the point of putting the SRD under the CC, rather than just telling us they won't revoke the OGL. No trust required.
 

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I dunno, man. I'm not a 3PP, but I do own a small business (not related to the hobby). And I'm telling you right now, if a company betrayed me to that extent and put me in grave fear for my livelihood, there's no way I'd ever trust them again. Even if the current people do everything right, who's to say the next people won't pull the exact same stuff a few years down the road?

And who's to say they are, in fact, doing everything right? Changing course because they caught flak doesn't exactly inspire confidence in their sincerity.
CC, they can’t go back on that
 



CC, they can’t go back on that
If you like 5e, it's true there's not a lot they can go back on. And that's great for fans.
What can they still go back on (even if it's not likely at this time)?
  • Compatibility with OneD&D.
  • Messing with the original OGL - which would potentially impact many systems including DCC, OSE, Pathfinder, & Level Up.
  • Could charge big subscription fees for Beyond and their VTT.
  • Could pull the licenses to official content for Roll20, Fantasy Grounds, and other VTTs.
I'm not saying any of this is likely, but I feel that the CC of 5.1 is just a start for fans.
 

If you like 5e, it's true there's not a lot they can go back on. And that's great for fans.
What can they still go back on (even if it's not likely at this time)?
  • Compatibility with OneD&D.
  • Messing with the original OGL - which would potentially impact many systems including DCC, OSE, Pathfinder, & Level Up.
  • Could charge big subscription fees for Beyond and their VTT.
  • Could pull the licenses to official content for Roll20, Fantasy Grounds, and other VTTs.
I'm not saying any of this is likely, but I feel that the CC of 5.1 is just a start for fans.
Pretty good start: the most important part is that it negates the business case for taking any of those actions, crippling any faction at WotC who would be tempted to for money. There's no print to be made anymore.
 

Yes - though there's at least one lawyer on here who thinks even the CC isn't ironclad.
nothing is I guess, even if they put it in the public domain they can still sue you over some made up stuff.

I was replying to someone saying what it would take to restore trust: and if I were a 3PP, I don't think there would BE anything.
that was the point of me saying the CC removes the issue of trust.

If however you do not trust them to the extent that you would not put it past them to start a fraudulent lawsuit they would likely lose, just so they can screw you over for no discernible benefit to them, expecting that you do not have the resources to defend yourself, then yes, there is nothing they can do.
Maybe over time they can, maybe not, but certainly no action they can take now.

I would not consider this a rational fear however.
 

If you like 5e, it's true there's not a lot they can go back on. And that's great for fans.
What can they still go back on (even if it's not likely at this time)?
  • Compatibility with OneD&D.
  • Messing with the original OGL - which would potentially impact many systems including DCC, OSE, Pathfinder, & Level Up.
  • Could charge big subscription fees for Beyond and their VTT.
  • Could pull the licenses to official content for Roll20, Fantasy Grounds, and other VTTs.
I'm not saying any of this is likely, but I feel that the CC of 5.1 is just a start for fans.
agreed, they can ‘go back on’ all of this. Not all of this is so much a going back though as something they never promised in the first place however (3).

I am certainly cautiously optimistic and watching what they do with regard to all of these.
 

If you like 5e, it's true there's not a lot they can go back on. And that's great for fans.
What can they still go back on (even if it's not likely at this time)?
  • Compatibility with OneD&D.
  • Messing with the original OGL - which would potentially impact many systems including DCC, OSE, Pathfinder, & Level Up.
  • Could charge big subscription fees for Beyond and their VTT.
  • Could pull the licenses to official content for Roll20, Fantasy Grounds, and other VTTs.
I'm not saying any of this is likely, but I feel that the CC of 5.1 is just a start for fans.
It is the only thing the is irrevocable. Everything else can change based on who is in charge at WotC st the time
 

I suppose WotC could become super duper scrutinizes of everything that uses that cc license and become letigous about anything that crosses the line by even a hair. And still leave the cc intact.

I’m pretty sure they wouldn’t do that. Really, I dint think for a second they’d do that. I do actually trust them that they won’t. But I never thought they’d go after the OGL either.
 

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