Unfortunately, nothing comes to mind for any sort of OGL replacement for mining rules. They might very well be out there, but if so the hard part is finding them; searching on DTRPG only turned up things like a miner class or stuff with "mineral" in the description.
Insofar as 3.5 material goes, if it's already published under the OGL, you already have a license from WotC for it, that being the OGL itself. You don't need any further permission from them, nor even their acknowledgment. That was what made the OGL so revolutionary: so long as you abided by its...
I know that working with the OGL can be intimidating, but it's really not nearly as difficult as it seems. Notwithstanding a few books that forget to make a declaration of what's Open Game Content and what's Product Identity, it's usually very straightforward.
For instance, the Ultimate Games...
Reading this over, I have several thoughts:
The big one to keep in mind is that this isn't going to be a question of plagiarism, but of Open Game Content. All of the sources you list are published under the Open Game License, and it's entirely legal (i.e. not plagiarism) to repost Open Game...
Thanks for the explanation; that's quite interesting. I'm reminded of Avalon Classic's PF1 supplement For Love or Power (affiliate link) which essentially systematizes the process of courting a spouse. It's something of a mini-game also, though it mostly relies on skill checks.
I'll note that there is still a number of small-press outlets making PF1 content. If you filter DriveThruRPG to just PF1 content, you'll see groups like Aardvark Press, Far Distant Future Publishing, Orphaned Bookworm Productions, and several other groups are still putting out new products...
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Please note my use of affiliate links in this post.
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I'm a huge fan of Eclipse, and think it's one of the best books ever written for the d20 System. I also love The Practical Enchanter (I think that's the one you meant) for its spell templates alone, though I also get a kick out of the magic item cost modifiers and spell research tables.
I don't know what that means, since I'm apparently not done.
I mean, you should know, since you're the one who opened with insults, insisting that you were "right," and then decided you didn't want to participate in the debate you started.
Yeah, no. A wall of text is just that, a response which doesn't have line breaks or different paragraphs. It's not a point-by-point response to your own lengthy post.
"Styled" his name? You literally got the name of the titular character wrong—repeatedly—while insisting that you had the better...
You're right to apologize for this post you made.
Have you read the novel? Because what you're describing doesn't match with what's in the tale.
That you call him "Von" Frankenstein is part of why I don't think you know the story as well as you seem to think you do. Quite frankly, the idea...
I just finished reading a 2015 reprint of the 1831 edition (i.e. the revised version of the original 1818 story) of Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley.
I picked this one up largely because the story is one that I knew through cultural osmosis, picking up the...