Goodman Games: Our Efforts Have Been Mischaracterized

Goodman Games' CEO Joseph Goodman made a statement via YouTube over the weekend*. The video itself focused on the content of the controversial upcoming City State of the Invincible Overlord crowdfunding product, but was prefaced by a short introduction by Joseph Goodman, in which he reiterates his company's commitment to inclusivity and diversity and its opposition to bigotry, something which they say they "don't want to be associated with".

Goodman goes on to say that the company's efforts have been "mischaracterized by some folks" but does not go so far as to identify the mischaracterization, so it's not entirely clear what they consider to be untrue other than the "inaccurate" statements made by Bob Bledsaw II of Judges Guild about Goodman Games' plans, which Goodman mentioned last week.

For those who haven't been following this story, it has been covered in the articles Goodman Games Revives Relationship With Anti-Semitic Publisher For New City State Kickstarter, Goodman Games Offers Assurances About Judges Guild Royalties, and Judges Guild Makes Statement About Goodman Controversy. In short, Goodman Games is currently licensing an old property from a company with which it claimed to have cut ties in 2020 after the owner of that company made a number of bigoted comments on social media. Goodman Games has repeatedly said that this move would allow them to provide backers of an old unfulfilled Judges Guild Kickstarter with refunds, but there are many people questioning seeming contradictions in both the timelines involved and in the appropriateness of the whole endeavour.

Despite the backlash, the prospects of the crowdfunding project do not seem to have been harmed. The pre-launch page has over 3,000 followers, and many of the comments under the YouTube videos or on other social media are not only very supportive of the project, but also condemn those who question its appropriateness. In comparison, the original (failed) Judges Guild Kickstarter had only 965 backers.

The video is embedded below, followed by a transcript of the relevant section.



Hi everybody, I'm Joseph Goodman of Goodman Games. We recently announced our City State of the Invincible Overlord crowdfunding project for 5E and DCC RPG.

In the video you're about to see, some of our product development team is going to tell you about what makes the City State so amazing and why we're bringing it back to 5E and DCC audiences nearly 50 years after it was first released. It really is an amazing setting.

But we could have rolled this project out with a lot more clarity. Now, to be clear, Goodman Games absolutely opposes any sort of bigotry, racism, anti-semitism, homophobia, transphobia. We don't want to support it. We don't want to be associated with it.

Our well-intentioned effort to launch this project in a way that refunds backers of a former failed Kickstarter from another publisher kind of backfired in the way we announced it. Rest assured, the funds from this crowdfunding will actually fund refunds to backers of the original City State crowdfunding for the Pathfinder edition from 2014.

Unfortunately, our efforts have been—you know, I didn’t clarify them perfectly when we rolled it out—and they've been mischaracterized by some folks since then. But please rest assured, we stand for inclusivity and diversity.

You can read a lot more detail in the post that's linked below, and there's another video linked below where we talk about this in even more detail. But for now, we hope you will sit back and enjoy as some of the product development team tells you about really what makes the City State of the Invincible Overlord so amazing, and why you might want to check it out when it comes to crowdfunding soon.

Thanks, and I'll turn it over to them now.

The statement refers to a post about this that is supposed to be linked below, but at the time of writing no post is linked below the video, so it's not clear if that refers to a new post or one of Goodman Games' previous statements on the issue.

I reached out to Joseph Goodman last week to offer a non-confrontational (although direct and candid) interview in which he could answer some ongoing questions and talk on his reasoning behind the decision; I have not yet received a response to the offer--I did, however, indicate that I was just leaving for UK Games Expo, and wouldn't be back until this week.

*Normally I would have covered this in a more timely fashion, but I was away at UK Games Expo from Thursday through to Monday.
 

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Well, gee, then if we ask you to put your proverbial money where your internet mouth is, and dare you to actually do that calculation, in defined units of "worth", then you could do it!

Right?

Please state definitions of all terms and units, and show all work.
It's an RPG supplement - it provides no nutritional content, is largely indigestible so no caloric content either, will not be a uniquely make or break moment in anybody's finances personal or corporate, isn't going to spell the difference between war and peace anywhere on earth, and isn't upholding an important constitutional right.
So, yeah, ZERO UNITS of any sort governing necessity. Zip. Nada.

Someone may get a wee little nostalgia woodie off it, but that's hardly a necessity. It's all unforced error, own-goal territory dealing with Nazis when it is ENTIRELY UNNECESSARY to do so.
 

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You're probably correct.
I suppose the question is more about the long-term. Whether or not this project makes it, what'll the impact to their business be? The next kickstarter won't have the controversy drawing eyeballs, or have the FOMO-effect driving it. Will it fly as well?
So we can now see it is funding like gangbusters... however I have not backed it. Not because of the controversy being discussed here, but because of the mind boggling decision to separate the PDF and Print pledge levels in the worst way I've ever seen. $200 pledge for either the 5e or DCC versions with NO PDF INCLUDED... If you want that, it's another $130 pledge for a total of $330.
In the past (with the exception of the old TSR stuff like Borderlands, Isle of Dread, etc) a PDF has always been included when you back a print product by Goodman. They are saying it is a licensing thing... in any case I don't want it that bad. But see how little difference my lack of pledging makes? Almost none... at this rate they'll hit a half a million before the weekend.
 



I don't think it's intentional -- honestly, there's clearly very little forethought being put into any of this -- but between the controversy and the separate expensive purchase for the PDFs, I suspect the piracy of this product is going to be off the charts, whether it's people scanning the hard copy or just widely disseminating the PDF.

What a mess, top to bottom.
 


What I mostly fear is that the success of the CSIO KS (and going by current numbers, it will be a success) will lead to people proclaiming Bledsaw's views no longer all that controversial, after all they didn't impede this. And thus the normalization of those views, which again, Joseph Goodman found so reprehensible in 2020 to cut all ties with JG and so much less reprehensible in 2022 that he approached them about the CSIO license, will continue.
 



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