WotC WotC Removes Digital Content Team Credits From D&D Beyond

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According to Faith Elisabeth Lilley, who was on the digital content team at Wizards of the Coast, the contributor credits for the team have been removed from DDB.

The team was responsible for content feedback and the implementation of book content on the online platform. While it had been indicated to them that they would not be included in the credits of the physical books for space reasons, WotC apparently agreed to include them in the online credits.

It appears that those credits have now been removed.

I just discovered that I have been removed from book credits on D&D Beyond for books I worked on while at Wizards of the Coast.

Background:

While at Wizards (so after D&D Beyond was purchased) - with numerous books, my digital content team and I worked directly with the book team on the content, reading through rules drafts, suggesting changes, giving ideas, and catching issues. We had a full database of the content and understood exactly how it interacted.

Given that we were contributing to the content in the books, I felt it reasonable to request that team be added to the credits, but was informed the credits section was already too crowded with the number of people involved and many of the marketing team had already been dropped from credits. I felt strongly that anyone actually contributing to what is in the printed book should be credited though, so we agreed a compromise, that the team would be added to the credits page on D&D Beyond only, as there is no issue with "not enough space" on a web page.

I've added screenshots here that I had for some of the books.

At some point recently, those credits pages have been edited to remove the credits for me and the content team. Nobody reached out to let me know - it just happened at some point, and I only just noticed.

We've even been removed from the digital-only releases, that only released on D&D Beyond, such as the Spelljammer Academy drops.

I'm not angry or upset, just yet again, really disappointed, as somehow I expected better.

EDIT TO ADD MORE CONTEXT

It's not just getting the books online. I worked with Kyle & Dan to improve the overall book process from ideation to delivery across all mediums (you should have seen the huge process charts I built out...)

The lead designers would send over the rules for each new rulebook and we'd go through it, give feedback, highlight potential balance issues, look at new rules/design that was difficult to implement digitally and suggest tweaks to improve it etc etc. We even had ideas for new content that was then included in the book.

We'd go through the whole book in detail, catching inconsistencies and miscalculations, and I'm proud to say that we dramatically reduced the need for clarifications or errata on those books.

I'm not saying anyone on the design or book team was careless - far from it, they're consummate professionals - I am just illustrating the role my team and I had in contributing to the content, quality & success of the physical books, let alone the digital versions.

We should have been in the credits section of the physical printed book. We were part of the creative process. That was something we were actively discussing when I was informed I was being laid off.

Adding the team to the credits pages just on D&D Beyond was, as I mentioned above, a compromise while we figured things out.

My team were fully credited on the Cortex: Prime and Tales of Xadia books when D&D Beyond was still part of Fandom, before the Wizards acquisition.

In fact for those books we made sure to credit the entire digital development team, including developers, community managers and so forth - everyone who helped make the book successful.

I know that Wizards has hundreds of people involved and previously hit issues with the number of people in credits for D&D books, so pulled back from crediting some roles.

Would it be so bad to have to dedicate extra space in a book to the people whose contributions made the book successful?

I really don't think it would.
 

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It's not a super big deal, but it's kind of pointless to do this. Like I can't see any reason not to credit them?
But it is a super big deal. I have a lot of friends who write. Some of them in RPG circles, some in others. What you've written is largely your gateway to getting future work. It shouldn't be surprising that there are a ton of people who write, edit, design for creative publishing works. The way you stand out is by the work you've previously done. And you want to make it easy for a prospective client to find that information.

I expect that this team didn't make a lot of money from this project (mind you, as my Economist father told me, the vast majority of writers live below poverty. It was 85% when he told me), but the thing you can get from it is the credit for working on a project this big. It's true in other types of writing as well. For everyone involved here, it is a very big deal.

And since this was a purely electronic edition, there isn't the problem that you can't fit every credit in. This is a classless decision. Will it affect anything? I doubt it because most people just don't care about details at this level.
 


Not crediting them is already bad, actively striking their name from the records is pure hostility: someone at WotC had an agenda.
In a lot of workplaces, this kind of behavior is a response to union talks -- and, ironically, fuel for the fire for such things. No idea if DDB folks are covered by a union currently, but if they're not, I would bet someone is talking unions now.
 

In a lot of workplaces, this kind of behavior is a response to union talks -- and, ironically, fuel for the fire for such things. No idea if DDB folks are covered by a union currently, but if they're not, I would bet someone is talking unions now.
It's hard to believe this kind of anti-union action is legal in our times.
 



It's not a super big deal, but it's kind of pointless to do this. Like I can't see any reason not to credit them?
Most likely to have the Beyond credits match up with the printed credits. Could be related to all the work being updates in preparation for the new books om the backend, amd someone decided to have a strict print-to-Beyond credits matxhup.

While honestly they should be providing more credits online than the pahe (because they have the room) there are a lot of people who go uncredited for D&D books as it is, like the internal playtesters, so it is a matter of where the line gets drawn.Digitally, they ahould credot absoutely everyone, like the movie industry does.
 


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