The OGL -- Just What's Going On?

D&D fandom is in uproar again about purported upcoming changes to the Open Gaming License, and rumours are flooding social media regarding WotC's intentions to 'de-authorize' the existing Open Gaming License in favour of a new one.

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What's the OGL?
The Open Gaming License is a share-a-like license created by D&D owner WotC about 20 years ago so that third parties could create material compatible with the then-3E D&D game. This allowed smaller publishers to ensure the game was supported with products which WotC could not make themselves, driving sales of the core rulebooks. D&D 5E's rules are also released under that very same license, which is why you see hundreds of 5E-compatible products on Kickstarter from massive projects like the 5E-powered The One Ring, down to small adventures and supplements. It has been widely believed for two decades that this license is irrevocable (and, indeed, WotC itself believed that -- see below), but it appears that WotC is now attempting to revoke it.

A Quick Recap
A few weeks ago, WotC made a short statement regarding the OGL, followed later by a more in-depth announcement covering revised terms, royalties, and annual revenue reporting.


At the same time, at the end of December, a number of hastily arranged meetings with 'key' third party creators under a strict NDA agreement were set up with WotC's licensing department in order to share the company's plans regarding licensing of D&D going forward (disclaimer -- while WotC also reached out to me, we were unable to schedule a meeting over the busy Christmas period, so I am not party to that information).

A New Rumour Emerges
This all came to a head yesterday when the Roll For Combat YouTube channel released what they said was a leak of the upcoming OGL from multiple trusted but anonymous sources within WotC.


This leak claims the following. Note -- it is impossible to verify these claims at this time.
  • There will be TWO OGL's -- an OCG: Commercial and an OGL: Non-Commercial.
  • The original OGL will become unauthorized. This hinges on the wording of s9 of the current OGL:
9. Updating the License: Wizards or its designated Agents may publish updated versions of this License. You may use any authorized version of this License to copy, modify and distribute any Open Game Content originally distributed under any version of this License.

While the license does indeed grand a 'perpetual' right to use the Open Gaming Content referenced, it appears that WotC currently believes that it can render a version of the license unauthorized. The license itself makes no reference to authorization or the lack thereof, nor does it define any methods of authorization or deauthorization, other than in that line. So this entire thing hinges on that one word, 'authorized' in the original OGL.

RollForCombat posted the following summary -- it is unclear whether this is their own paraphrasing, or that of their anonymous source, or indeed the actual document (although tonally it doesn't sound like it):


"This agreement is, along with the OGL: Non-Commercial, an update to the previously available OGL 1.0(a), which is no longer an authorized license agreement. We can modify or terminate this agreement for any reason whatsoever, provided We give thirty (30) days’ notice. We will provide notice of any such changes by posting the revisions on Our website, and by making public announcements through Our social media channels."

"You own the new and original content You create. You agree to give Us a nonexclusive, perpetual, irrevocable, worldwide, sub-licensable, royalty-free license to use that content for any purpose."

"You waive any right to sue over Our decision on these issues. We’re aware that, if We somehow stretch Our decision of what is or is not objectionable under these clauses too far, We will receive community pushback and bad PR, and We’re more than open to being convinced that We made a wrong decision. But nobody gets to use the threat of a lawsuit as part of an attempt to convince Us."

The ability for WotC to use your Open Gaming Content is not new; the company could do that under the old OGL also; it has rarely exercised that right, though it did reuse a couple of third party monsters in a 3E rulebook.

iO9 Gets A Copy
However, Linda Codega over at Gizmodo/iO9 got hold of a copy of the current draft of the OGL 1.1.
  • It's long. It's ten times the length of the current OGL, at 9,000 words.
  • No bigots. It prohibits NFTs and bigoted content.
  • Print/PDF only. It also prohibits apps and video games. And pantomimes, apparently. The wording says "including but not limited to things like videos, virtual tabletops or VTT campaigns, computer games, novels, apps, graphics novels, music, songs, dances, and pantomimes."
  • Deauthorizes the previous OGL. The license states that the OGL 1.0a is "no longer an authorized license agreement".
  • It’s soon! Pressingly, the draft also indicates that publishers who wish to sell SRD-based content on or after January 13th (which is just 8 days away!) have only one option: agree to the OGL: Commercial. That gives companies very little time to evaluate the license or make any necessary changes.
  • Clear OGL declarations. The new license contains other restrictions which effectively prohibit companies from identifying their OGC via a separate System Reference Document (which is what games like Pathfinder do); instead the reader must be alerted to Open Gaming Content within the product itself.
  • Royalties. As previously noted, creators who make over $750K will need to pay royalties to WotC. WotC does indicate that it might reach out to succesful creators for a more 'custom (and mutially beneficial) licensing arrangement). Creators are divided into three tiers - under $50K, $50K-$750K, and $750K+. The royalty is 20% or 25% of 'qualifying revenue', which is revenue in excess of $750K. The term used is revenue, not profit.
  • They want you to use Kickstarter. Kickstarter -- their 'preferred' platform -- attracts the lower 20% royalty, and non-Kickstarter crowdfuders attract 25%. It's interesting that WotC even has a preferred crowdfunding platform, let alone that they are trying to influence creators to use it over its competitors like Backerkit, IndieGoGo, Gamefound, and the like.
  • New logo. An identifying badge will be required on products which use the new OGL, and creators will need to send WotC a copy of their product.
The document itself comments that “the Open Game License was always intended to allow the community to help grow D&D and expand it creatively. It wasn’t intended to subsidize major competitors, especially now that PDF is by far the most common form of distribution.” That sounds like it is talking about companies such as Paizo.

Community Reaction
Social media has exploded, with a lot of very negative pushback regarding this news.

Many people have weighed in with their interpretations of s9 (above), both lawyers and non-lawyers. There seems to be little agreement in that area right now. If the above rumous is true, then WotC's current leadership clearly believes that previous iterations of the OGL can be 'de-authorized'. It's interesting to note that previous WotC administrations believed otherwise, and said as much in their own official OGL FAQ:


7. Can't Wizards of the Coast change the License in a way that I wouldn't like?

Yes, it could. However, the License already defines what will happen to content that has been previously distributed using an earlier version, in Section 9. As a result, even if Wizards made a change you disagreed with, you could continue to use an earlier, acceptable version at your option. In other words, there's no reason for Wizards to ever make a change that the community of people using the Open Gaming License would object to, because the community would just ignore the change anyway.

OGL architect Ryan Dancey also appears to have felt otherwise. In an article right here on EN World he said:

I also had the goal that the release of the SRD would ensure that D&D in a format that I felt was true to its legacy could never be removed from the market by capricious decisions by its owners.

Of course, many game systems are released using that license: Pathfinder, Fate, Open d6, WOIN, and many, many more -- many of them have nothing at all to do with D&D and simply use the license as a useful tool for enabling third-party content creators; while Pathfinder is, of course, the industry's largest OGL game and published by Paizo, the industry's second largest TTRPG comapmny after WotC itself. If the original OGL were somehow to become invalid, all these games would be affected.


There are other bits to the current rumour -- a 30 day notice period during which WotC can change the license any way they wish, and a waiver over the right to sue the company.

It's hard to get a clear picture of what's going on right now. I haven't seen the new OGL, and other than a handul of 'key' creators, it seems like very few have. WotC did indicate that it would be unveiled very soon.

Is it an OGL?
While it may be called "Open Gaming License v1.1", if the above is true, this isn't really an update to the OGL, it's an entirely new license. Ryan Dancey, architect of the original OGL. and who runs the Open Gaming Foundation, defines open gaming licenses as --
1. Game Rules and materials that use those rules that can be freely copied, modified and distributed.​
2. A system for ensuring that material contributed to the Open Gaming community will remain Open and cannot be made Closed once contributed.​
By these definitions, it appears that the new OGL is not actually an open gaming license, and has more in common with the Game System License WotC used for D&D 4th Edition.

So, What Now?
Now, we wait and see. Many eyes will be on the bigger players -- Paizo, Kobold Press, Green Ronin, etc. -- to see what action they take. As yet, none of these have commented publicly except for Green Ronin's Chris Pramas who told Gizmodo that they had not yet seen the new license, but they do not believe there is "any benefit to switching to the new one as described.” As for Paizo, Gizmodo says "Paizo Inc., publisher of the Pathfinder RPG, one of D&D’s largest competitors, declined to comment on the changes for this article, stating that the rules update was a complicated and ongoing situation."

Will these companies go along with it? Will they ignore it? Will they challenge it? We'll have to wait and see!

7 days is not enough time for even a small publisher to overhaul its entire product line to comply with new rules, let along a large one like Paizo. I have to assume there is an allowed time period to do this, otherwise it's practically impossible to do. It does seem that -- if proven enforceable -- the de-athorization of the existing OGL would drive many companies out of business, especially those which produce or lean heavily on electronic apps and the like.

It also remains to be seen how WotC goes about the task of persuading creators to use its new license -- will it tempt them with a carrot (such as access to the D&D Beyond platform), or try to force them with a stick (such as threat of legal action)? And how will the TTRPG community react, because this goes far beyond just D&D.

It sounds like we'll hear something more solid imminently.
 

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On the one hand, yes. Ont he other hand...the status quo was built on sand, it turns out. It would wash out eventually.
I'm not convinced that would necessarily wash out eventually, especially since WotC could easily prevent that from happening any time they choose to. Yes, I have extremely little faith that they would do that, but considering it lasted almost half of D&D's lifetime without an issue (and the only thing stopping legal challenges to WotC's move was their size, not necessarily their legal merits), I'm not sure that foundation is quite as sandy as you claim, but I agree it definitely isn't as stable as it once was.

Well, the OGL is safe now for a very particular reason: WotC has nothing to gain from touching it now. Creative Commons means there isn't a business case for touching the OGL.
True. But the damage is still done with ORC splintering off, as well as waves of both system-specific homegrown licenses of varying quality and a growing number of works based on CC-SRD having no interesting in any open gaming commons except as a consumer.

I still plan to use the OGL and agree that it is not going away any time soon. That doesn't negate the harm that was done, however, especially to the countless OGL works whose futures were abruptly called into question. I know someone who passed away a few years back who added much of his work to OGC and was happy that could help his creative works live on. I know it sounds weird to be grandiose about the d20 glut, but there are some gems in there and people's creations that they were told by WotC would be available forever for anyone to build upon and keep their ideas alive. That is the kind of harm that bothers me most and I'm not sure that harm can even be undone at this point.

So I'll probably stop since my posts aren't really about the OGL going forward than just mourning that past and the harm WotC caused to many.
 

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I'm not sure that harm can even be undone at this point.
Mostly could with issuing an OGL version that makes explicit that it is irrevocable. That would protect all existing OGC and allow it to still be stuff that could be safely used in other's publishing projects and protect publisher's PI and protect future people wanting to build on it.

It is so frustrating that there is an easy fix that is being passed up. It would just take WotC copying and pasting the existing document and adding one line. WotC choosing to do it is the big sticking point.
 

Mostly could with issuing an OGL version that makes explicit that it is irrevocable. That would protect all existing OGC and allow it to still be stuff that could be safely used in other's publishing projects and protect publisher's PI and protect future people wanting to build on it.

It is so frustrating that there is an easy fix that is being passed up. It would just take WotC copying and pasting the existing document and adding one line. WotC choosing to do it is the big sticking point.
Easier said than done: that would require a lot of legal work to craft something thet would no doubt still be less functional than the CC already is.
 

But the CC-BY doesn't really allow the same virality that the OGL and ORC does. If a 3PP makes a book using the 5e CC-BY as the base. But DOESN'T release their book under the CC-BY, then another 3PP has to make a separate license agreement with the first 3PP if they want to work in their sandbox.
 

But the CC-BY doesn't really allow the same virality that the OGL and ORC does. If a 3PP makes a book using the 5e CC-BY as the base. But DOESN'T release their book under the CC-BY, then another 3PP has to make a separate license agreement with the first 3PP if they want to work in their sandbox.
Yeah, Shadowdark notably doesn't use CC, although it has a very permissive bespoke license of its own. So even though that appears to be well-meant (and a reaction to the OGL crisis), it is still more limited than CC, from my reading. (IANAL)
 

But the CC-BY doesn't really allow the same virality that the OGL and ORC does. If a 3PP makes a book using the 5e CC-BY as the base. But DOESN'T release their book under the CC-BY, then another 3PP has to make a separate license agreement with the first 3PP if they want to work in their sandbox.
Yeah, but how much did that ever take off? People using the OGL have always been able to close off anything they want ad "Product Identity," as Monte Cook's Games or MCDM do regularly. It is always essentially an opt-in feature.
 

Yeah, but how much did that ever take off? People using the OGL have always been able to close off anything they want ad "Product Identity," as Monte Cook's Games or MCDM do regularly. It is always essentially an opt-in feature.
There have been companies who used the OGL in that way. But there have also been others who have been remarkably generous with their IP. WoTC have killed off future access to this IP.

Creative Commons provides no easy way to distinguish between shared content and reserved content. So it tends to encourage an all-or-nothing approach. And more often than not, publishers are choosing nothing. This suits the incumbent players just fine as it makes it harder for a community alternative to arise.
 

There have been companies who used the OGL in that way. But there have also been others who have been remarkably generous with their IP. WoTC have killed off future access to this IP.

Creative Commons provides no easy way to distinguish between shared content and reserved content. So it tends to encourage an all-or-nothing approach. And more often than not, publishers are choosing nothing. This suits the incumbent players just fine as it makes it harder for a community alternative to arise.
shrug

Seems like six of one, half a dozen of the other from where I stand.
 

Yeah, but how much did that ever take off? People using the OGL have always been able to close off anything they want ad "Product Identity," as Monte Cook's Games or MCDM do regularly. It is always essentially an opt-in feature.
That remains to be seen. I think most people's reading of the OGL is that you aren't supposed to just be able to declare anything you want to be product identity. That's meant for commonly understood IP type stuff like names, places etc.

I think the issue here is that it's not worthwhile for anybody to challenge Monte Cook or MCDM in court over it, and likely never will.

Personally, I can tell you that I find the practice really, really distateful and parasitic. In their minds they get to benefit and iterate upon the decades of Open Game Content out there but they contribute back nothing. They won't be seeing a dollar from me ever. And I'm gonna bang that drum until I die.

I'm a very, very stubborn man. It's in my big book of dwarven grudges.
 

That remains to be seen. I think most people's reading of the OGL is that you aren't supposed to just be able to declare anything you want to be product identity. That's meant for commonly understood IP type stuff like names, places etc.
Thst was relatively clearly the concept, but...that has no legally binding force. At all.
I think the issue here is that it's not worthwhile for anybody to challenge Monte Cook or MCDM in court over it, and likely never will.
Who would have any standing? And on what grounds?
Personally, I can tell you that I find the practice really, really distateful and parasitic. In their minds they get to benefit and iterate upon the decades of Open Game Content out there but they contribute back nothing. They won't be seeing a dollar from me ever. And I'm gonna bang that drum until I die.

I'm a very, very stubborn man. It's in my big book of dwarven grudges.
Fair enough, but the success of those companies rather suggests thst isn't a hull the RPG community as a while cares about particularly.
 

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