D&D 5E WotC: Why Dark Sun Hasn't Been Revived

In an interview with YouTuber 'Bob the Worldbuilder', WotC's Kyle Brink explained why the...

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In an interview with YouTuber 'Bob the Worldbuilder', WotC's Kyle Brink explained why the classic Dark Sun setting has not yet seen light of day in the D&D 5E era.

I’ll be frank here, the Dark Sun setting is problematic in a lot of ways. And that’s the main reason we haven’t come back to it. We know it’s got a huge fan following and we have standards today that make it extraordinarily hard to be true to the source material and also meet our ethical and inclusion standards... We know there’s love out there for it and god we would love to make those people happy, and also we gotta be responsible.

You can listen to the clip here.
 

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Still, this suggests that maybe Dark Sun contains ideas that don't really need to be revisited through a 2023 update. It's okay to like something while accepting that it is of its time and should probably stay there.
I agree with the general sentiment that we can accept things were of their time. But I don’t believe Dark Sun was advocating anything bad of its time (even in 1990: the lessons of WWII and the evils of racialist science and slavery were well known). I doubt anyone seriously sees the inclusion of slavery as a setting element as an endorsement. It is just about emphasizing the brutality of the setting and enabling standard sword and sandal tropes.
 

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Micah Sweet

Level Up & OSR Enthusiast
I agree with the general sentiment that we can accept things were of their time. But I don’t believe Dark Sun was advocating anything bad of its time (even in 1990: the lessons of WWII and the evils of racialist science and slavery were well known). I doubt anyone seriously sees the inclusion of slavery as a setting element as an endorsement. It is just about emphasizing the brutality of the setting and enabling standard sword and sandal tropes.
It seems like nowadays, including any negative element in your art (except general violence, for some reason) is the same to some very loud people as endorsing it.
 

Irlo

Hero
So a single hypothetical book being released with content you personally find exclusionary, means you are excluded from the hobby. The whole hobby, despite there being more content that you (I assume) dont find exclusionary than you can likely consume in a lifetime?
If it were a single hypothetical book, I don't think we'd be having this conversation. The content is pervasive. Feelings of exclusion build up over time, and it takes time to undo the damage.
 

Remathilis

Legend
I think you are reading a lot into these texts in order to help them fit comfortably into your world view. You are being very charitable in your interpretation of texts that don't seem super subtle, which again is a credit to you. Still, this suggests that maybe Dark Sun contains ideas that don't really need to be revisited through a 2023 update. It's okay to like something while accepting that it is of its time and should probably stay there.
I always read that as weak in-game justification for why Dark Sun PCs are "kewl and xtreme" and could totally crush PCs from those other wimpy lame settings, man.

Which is probably what turned me off to the setting more than anything else. It tried to dial the power up to 11 in a bid to be "moar hardkore" than any other D&D setting. PCs can have 20s in ability scores! They start at third level! They all have wild talents! You'll need it to survive! It was D&D by way of a monster truck rally commercial.

If they ever do decide to make a 5e Dark Sun, I hope all that power gaming nonsense remains left in the dust bin.
 


Micah Sweet

Level Up & OSR Enthusiast
If it were a single hypothetical book, I don't think we'd be having this conversation. The content is pervasive. Feelings of exclusion build up over time, and it takes time to undo the damage.
The single hypothetical book is Dark Sun 5e. Are you saying the existence of such a book would be the straw that breaks the camel's back for you?
 

Micah Sweet

Level Up & OSR Enthusiast
I always read that as weak in-game justification for why Dark Sun PCs are "kewl and xtreme" and could totally crush PCs from those other wimpy lame settings, man.

Which is probably what turned me off to the setting more than anything else. It tried to dial the power up to 11 in a bid to be "moar hardkore" than any other D&D setting. PCs can have 20s in ability scores! They start at third level! They all have wild talents! You'll need it to survive! It was D&D by way of a monster truck rally commercial.

If they ever do decide to make a 5e Dark Sun, I hope all that power gaming nonsense remains left in the dust bin.
I certainly thought all that talk was exciting back in the 90s; it did the job is was written for. I don't need it personally anymore, but I would be sold on a worldbuilding faithful Dark Sun with decent new mechanics without it.
 

Irlo

Hero
Dark Sun. Would be a single book.
A single book? It's 40 years of D&D and the often racist tropes that have been uncritically imported from an even longer history of pulp (and mainstream) fiction. And Paizo's clumsy handling of slavery in its campaign setting and public play events. And the minstril art in Spelljammer. And the never-ending list of movies, books, and games including slavery that are pervasive in our culture.

Are you saying everything was hunky-dory for everyone until we started talking about a non-existant 5e DS? And now suddenly people are feeling excluded?

It's not sudden. It's not that people are either fine and dandy or they're excluded. The feelings build over time. How the community addresses these issues feeds back into feelings of acceptance or exclusion.

I'll say again. If it were a single hypothetical book, we wouldn't be having this conversation.
The single hypothetical book is Dark Sun 5e. Are you saying the existence of such a book would be the straw that breaks the camel's back for you?
For me, no. I don't feel the exlusion. I recognize that others do. Would it be the final straw for some people? Maybe, but I don't suppose many would leave the hobby if DS 5e were published. But it would send a message, intended or not. Exlusion is not all or nothing.
 

James Gasik

We don't talk about Pun-Pun
Supporter
I live in a country where parents in a southern state were so shocked and appalled that their kids were being taught about Renaissance art, including the works of Michelangelo, that they got the school principal fired. Calling the statue of David (among other works) "pornographic" and "potentially harmful to their children".

These were 6th graders, by the way, right in that 12+ age rating for D&D. If parents can freak over this, then the scantily clad heroes of Dark Sun, a world overrun by cruel tyrants who permit slavery and espouse eugenics while entertaining the masses with gladiatorial combat to the death are not going to immune to such insanity.

Never no mind the fact that climate change is certainly real on Athas, and is totally caused by human (and humanoid) activity, something that people rabidly deny on my completely non-fantastic planet.

So no, I'm not saying WotC cannot print Dark Sun in all it's 90's glory. I'm saying they'd be playing with dynamite to do so.
 

Micah Sweet

Level Up & OSR Enthusiast
A single book? It's 40 years of D&D and the often racist tropes that have been uncritically imported from an even longer history of pulp (and mainstream) fiction. And Paizo's clumsy handling of slavery in its campaign setting and public play events. And the minstril art in Spelljammer. And the never-ending list of movies, books, and games including slavery that are pervasive in our culture.

Are you saying everything was hunky-dory for everyone until we started talking about a non-existant 5e DS? And now suddenly people are feeling excluded?

It's not sudden. It's not that people are either fine and dandy or they're excluded. The feelings build over time. How the community addresses these issues feeds back into feelings of acceptance or exclusion.

I'll say again. If it were a single hypothetical book, we wouldn't be having this conversation.

For me, no. I don't feel the exlusion. I recognize that others do. Would it be the final straw for some people? Maybe, but I don't suppose many would leave the hobby if DS 5e were published. But it would send a message, intended or not. Exlusion is not all or nothing.
Then I don't see this one hypothetical book being enough of a problem to not release it. Just like I've been saying all along, these elements have a place in RPGs.
 

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