Jeremy Crawford Also Leaving D&D Team Later This Month

jeremy crawford.jpg


Jeremy Crawford is leaving Wizards of the Coast later this month. Screen Rant (via me!) had the exclusive announcement. Crawford was the Game Director for Dungeons & Dragons and was one of the guiding forces for D&D over the past decade. In the past year, Crawford has focused on the core rulebooks and leading the team of rules designers. He has also been a face of Dungeons & Dragons for much of 5th Edition, appearing in many promotional videos and DMing Acquisitions Incorporated Actual Play series.

He joins Chris Perkins in leaving the D&D team in recent weeks. Perkins, who was the Creative Director for D&D, announced his retirement last week. Both Perkins and Crawford appear to have left Wizards on their terms, with Lanzillo very effusive with her praise of both men and their contribution in our interview.

On a personal note, I've enjoyed interviewing Jeremy over the years. He was always gracious with his time and answers and is one of the most eloquent people I've ever heard talk about D&D. I'll miss both him and Chris Perkins and look forward to their next steps, wherever that might be.
 

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Christian Hoffer

Christian Hoffer

I think you'll be waiting a long time for official D&D RPG products in that vein. That type of content has only ever been served up by 3rd Parties, probably for the best from a brand perspective.

Dark Sun was not a 3rd party release.

Fact of the matter is, and they are on record on this, they know people want content like it, they know (or are idiots) that it sells (see BG3) and yet....

Alert me when we get a proper Sword and Sorcery release.
 

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Dark Sun was not a 3rd party release.

Fact of the matter is, and they are on record on this, they know people want content like it, they know (or are idiots) that it sells (see BG3) and yet....

Alert me when we get a proper Sword and Sorcery release.
I wouldn't quite put Dark Sun in that category, and even when they touched upon it during 4E it was not the edgey Sword & Sorcery of old. I don't think we will see something quite like that again.

A lot of things have a market. The issue is that companies have to pick and choose what to serve up using a finite amount of resources. Believe me, I'd love to see some support for older editions, but the stark reality is that the numbers are against things like that from a cold hard business perspective.
 

They tried being child friendly, it doesn't work, bear humping works.
It worked for Larian. There is no evidence it would work for tabletop D&D and plenty of anecdotal evidence that it would not (given how shy folks are about including sex and romance in their games). People generally prefer their humping entertainment in private or with intimate partners, not their beer buddies.
 

A lot of things have a market. The issue is that companies have to pick and choose what to serve up using a finite amount of resources. Believe me, I'd love to see some support for older editions, but the stark reality is that the numbers are against things like that from a cold hard business perspective.

They are not.

Hasbro/Wizards has more of a budget than anyone else in the industry. If a single person can do it, Wizards absolutely could as well.

They dont do it, because they dont want the smoke.
 

It doesnt have to be the default, but I tire of 'oh try our many flavours!'

"We have Vanilla."
Well that ship sailed five minutes into 5E's playtest. I was very excited by the idea of "packages" of rules to add to the spine that was D&D to get the flavor of game you wanted. It's a real shame 5E didn't stick to that. We could be seeing "Sword & Sorcery" category books alongside "Magi-tech" and "High Fantasy" but it was not to be. It probably would have segmented the product lines too much and we would have had another 2E situation anyway.
 


They are not.

Hasbro/Wizards has more of a budget than anyone else in the industry. If a single person can do it, Wizards absolutely could as well.

They dont do it, because they dont want the smoke.
More of a budget does not mean infinite budget. WotC is also putting out products that have a higher production quality than most third parties. Are there 3rd Parties that do a better job? Yes, but that is due to a smaller scope.
 

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