Open RPG Creative (ORC) License Draft Published

Paizo Publishing and Azora Law have published the initial draft of the Open RPG Creative license (ORC) for public feedback. This license was concieved of during January's Open Gaming License (OGL) controversy and was designed as an independent, irrevocable replacement for that license. Also available is an FAQ, or the 'Answers & Explanations" (AxE) which explains the structure. Commentary can...

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Paizo Publishing and Azora Law have published the initial draft of the Open RPG Creative license (ORC) for public feedback. This license was concieved of during January's Open Gaming License (OGL) controversy and was designed as an independent, irrevocable replacement for that license. Also available is an FAQ, or the 'Answers & Explanations" (AxE) which explains the structure.

Commentary can be left until April 21st, and the intention is to finish the license by the end of April.

So what is ORC? It's an open license which can be used by any creator to 'open' their game up so that other creators can use it. It is independent and irrevocable, and cannot be updated or revised.

 

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Ondath

Hero
Interesting to see they ended up registering the license at the Library of the Congress instead of leaving the license's control to a neutral organisation. The license doesn't seem that different from what the OGL 1.0 set out to do, let's see if the large number of adopters makes a difference!
 




Alzrius

The EN World kitten
Interesting note in the draft FAQ:

Wizards used CC BY 4.0, which gives everyone the right to use the contents of the SRD they designated. This was a wonderful assurance for the gaming community that 5e could confidentially be used forever. Unfortunately, when another company builds on their SRD, their innovations are trapped in their product and not automatically relicensed to the gaming community. This effectively kills the virtuous circle that open-source communities are built on.
 

Whizbang Dustyboots

Gnometown Hero
This is not future proof! What about when we venture out into space, can the ORC license not follow? :eek:

I initially thought of this as a joke, until I read that the license can't be changed later, which is a problem when you don't future proof your language... 🚀
I suspect the 10,000 ENWorld lawyers will weigh in here, but I imagine the courts will recognize "worldwide" as meaning "across our civilization," although probably only after a few lawsuits. IN SPAAAAAAACE.
 
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