3. Which of the following d20 products do you think are official Dungeons & Dragons

Which of the following d20 products do you think are official Dungeons & Dragons prod

  • Dragonstar by Fantasy Flight Games

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Forgotten Realms: Campaign Setting

    Votes: 154 92.2%
  • Freeport: City of Adventure by Green Ronin Publishing

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Kingdoms of Kalamar by Kenzer & Company

    Votes: 129 77.2%
  • Ravenloft Campaign Setting by Arthaus (Sword & Sorcery)

    Votes: 25 15.0%
  • Rokugan by AEG

    Votes: 17 10.2%


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Well, if you said "should be" or "could be" rather than are, you would maybe had more vote for DragonStar and Freeport.

FRCS is D&D, Kalamar also thanks to the Kenzer-Wizards license deal; Rokugan is nearly D&D since to another deal and the Oriental Adventure 3e book.
 


creamsteak said:
Should I ask for a temporary sticky?

Guess not... I'll just keep em' bumped for a day or two.
How about just a link to WotC's site where these polls come from and make a little sense?
 




I guess we just know too much to make this a simple yes/no. The FRCS is obviously a WotC D&D product. Kenzer's KoK isn't a D&D product per se, but it's published under the D&D logo through special licence with WotC. (Also, they market it as an official D&D product. Strange.) Rokugan isn't a D&D product, though it uses information from a closed D&D product (OA) with a special licence from WotC - that's why the releases were so close. Ravenloft also has a special deal going with WotC, but I'm not sure of the terms... it's still not a D&D product, though. Freeport is published under the terms of the OGL and d20 STL, but has no other affliation with WotC - though it does say you need the D&D PH to play. Dragonstar is the same, but is more of a standalone game.
 

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