Elon Musk Calls for Wizards of the Coast to "Burn in Hell" Over Making of Original D&D Passages

Status
Not open for further replies.
elon musk.png


Elon Musk, the owner of the app formerly known as Twitter, is calling on Wizards of the Coast and its parent company Hasbro to "burn in hell" for the publication of Making of Original Dungeons & Dragons. On November 21st, former gaming executive turned culture warrior Mark Hern posted several passages from Making of Original Dungeons & Dragons on Twitter, criticizing the book for providing context about some of the misogyny and cultural insensitivity found in early rulebooks. These passages were pulled from the foreword written by Jason Tondro, a senior designer for the D&D team who also worked extensively on the book. Hern stated that these passages, along with the release of the new 2024 Player's Handbook and Dungeon Master's Guide for D&D's "40th anniversary" (it is actually D&D's 50th anniversary) both "erased and slandered" Gary Gygax and other creators of Dungeons & Dragons.

In response, Musk wrote "Nobody, and I mean nobody, gets to trash E. Gary Gygax and the geniuses who created Dungeons & Dragons. What the [naughty word] is wrong with Hasbro and WoTC?? May they burn in hell." Musk had played Dungeons & Dragons at some point in his youth, but it's unclear when the last time he ever played the game.

Nobody, and I mean nobody, gets to trash E. Gary Gygax and the geniuses who created Dungeons & Dragons. What the [xxxx] is wrong with Hasbro and WoTC?? May they burn in hell.
- Elon Musk​

Notably, Making of Original Dungeons & Dragons contains countless correspondences and letters written by both Gygax and Dave Arneson, including annotated copies of early D&D rulesets. Most early D&D rules supplements as well as early Dragon magazines are also found in the book. It seems odd to contain one of the most extensive compliations of Gygax's work an "erasure," but it's unclear whether Hern or Musk actually read the book given the incorrect information about the anniversary.

Additionally, Gygax and Arneson are both credited in the 2024 Player's Handbook and Dungeon Master's Guide. The exact credit reads: "Building on the original game created by Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson and then developed by many others over the past 50 years." Wizards of the Coast also regularly collaborates with Gygax's youngest son Luke and is a participant at Gary Con, a convention held in Gygax's honor. The opening paragraph of the 2024 Player's Handbook is written by Jeremy Crawford and specifically lauds both Gygax and Arneson for making Dungeons & Dragons and contains an anecdote about Crawford meeting Gygax.

Musk has increasingly leaned into culture war controversies in recent years, usually amplifying misinformation to suit his own political agenda.
 

log in or register to remove this ad

Christian Hoffer

Christian Hoffer


log in or register to remove this ad



eh, I don’t think I need advice on how we should all be nice to each other from the crowd that calls people they disagree with the enemy within. Just to be clear, I am not referring to you here
Did not know I was addressing you particularly. And as far as I am concerned it’s less about nice and more about being reality based.
 




Seed the wind, reap the whirlwind as they say. I'm not convincing anyone so I'm out of this thread, because this isn't really my problem,WotC did this to themselves, it's their problem as are the consequences.

Just Tondo PLEASE DON'T SCREW UP ON DOING THE FR BOOKS, I care more that he learns from his mistakes. I'm an FR fan first, D&D fan second, so for me these are more important then the Core Books or this "history" book.
WotC doesn't have a "problem" here, there are no consequences to speak of at all: the book seems to have sold well, their new core books are selling like hot cakes. What "lesson" should they learn?

Tondo did not make any mistakes, he was simply honest about the facts, and communicated them in a nuanced manner.
 

His platform still has hundreds of millions of people on it and the folks with actual power are still there or like Disney and others major decision makers and advertisers have came back. It doesn't matter if Twitter is losing money or even a a few million users, because it achieved it's purpose for Musk, RAW POWER. And that doesn't even include the fact that Musk could simply buy Hasbro easily, and put say Kuntz in charge or anyone he wanted too. 8 billion is chump change for Musk. And he's well positioned for the next 4 years to become richer and even more powerful, with advertisers flocking to Twitter not so much to benifit from the ads as to kiss the scepter of the new scary vengenful regime. Musk has too much power, he will be able to end the FTC lawsuits against his company now for example. I find it very concerning honestly. But I'm drifting to much into the political realm, I apologize, it's just hard to discuss what Musk does without contending with his increased power and it's consequences on whatever he does now. It lands differently now then it did back in October, the whole game changed.
This sounds more like your own power fantasy. Or should I say RAW POWER fantasy .
 


Status
Not open for further replies.
Remove ads

Remove ads

Top