4 Hours w/ RSD - Escapist Bonus Column

As many of you know, the Escapist has recently run a 3-part series on the past, current and future of Dungeons & Dragons. The ENWorld coverage begins here.

I contributed some insights to that column and wanted to take this opportunity to expand and clarify some of my thoughts on this topic.

GenCon2009-LisaStevens-OVC0U8.jpg

Who Is This Guy Anyway?

I [Ryan Dancey] have been involved on the business side of hobby game publishing since 1993, when I operated one of the first on-line/mail order hobby game stores, RPG International. It was through my work at RPG International that I met the team at Alderac Entertainment Group with whom I co-created the Legend of the Five Rings intellectual property, eventually spinning it out into a stand-alone company called Five Rings Publishing Group which was acquired by Wizards of the Coast in 1997 as a part of the process whereby Wizards also acquired TSR. I was at Wizards, working as a brand manager on trading card games and eventually leading the brand and business unit for Dungeons & Dragons until early in 2001 when I left to found a startup providing organized play services to 3rd party game companies, wound that down in 2003 and worked as a consultant until 2007 when I became the Chief Marketing Officer of CCP. Currently I’m the CEO of Goblinworks, a startup company developing a next-generation fantasy MMO.

I give that background (again for those of you who read the first column in this series; sorry for the repetition) just to establish the fact that I’ve been watching this industry closely for a very long time and feel I’ve got some insights worth sharing.

The Tabletop Roleplaying Game Hobby Is Contracting

Let me begin with a few simple statistics.

In 1995, when I was writing the business plan for the Legend of the Five Rings CCG, I assumed, based on the conventional wisdom at the time, that there were approximately 5,000 full line hobby gaming stores in the North American market. After arriving at Wizards of the Coast in 1997, I was surprised to discover that Wizards had been able to identify (after extensive work) only about 2,500 stores. In addition, there were about 2,500-3,000 mass-market book stores that sold some hobby gaming products; mostly TRPGs, and mostly just D&D.

Today, the best data I have been able to assemble leads me to believe that there are less than 1,000 full line hobby gaming stores left, and there may be as few as 500.

Of those mass-market bookstores, B. Dalton is gone. Waldenbooks is gone. Borders is going. Barnes & Nobel is not healthy. Today, there are only about 1,000 mass-market bookstores left (717 are Barnes & Nobel stores). That is meaningful because historically 50% of the D&D business was sold via mass-market bookstores and the loss of those stores has directly impacted D&D (and other TRPGs) significantly.

In 1994, when I attended my first GenCon, the list of exhibitors at the show included many companies that earned most (or all) of their income from selling tabletop RPGs, and who employed one or more full time TRPG designer/developers: Atlas Games, Chaosium, Dream Pod Nine, FASA, Game Designers Workshop, Heartbreaker, Hero Games, Iron Crown Enterprises, Mayfair, Palladium, R. Talsorian, Steve Jackson Games, TSR, West End Games, White Wolf, and I’m sure there’s others I’ve regretfully omitted.

In addition to those companies there was another constellation of small publishers consisting of one or two people trying to make a start in the business, working part time as TRPG designer/publishers, and buzzing around all these companies were dozens (maybe as many as a hundred) freelancers who made all or a significant part of their incomes from TRPG design work.

It’s notable that many in the industry saw the period from 1994-1999 as being fairly bad for TRPGs. The twin rise of collectible card games and the Games Workshop hobby appeared to be draining the TRPG segment of designers and of revenue. The most obvious sign of this problem was the failure of TSR’s business, leading to its acquisition by Wizards of the Coast in 1997.

I would argue that the segment actually brought on most of its woes by simply producing too much product. The proliferation of games, game worlds, and “house systems” so fragmented the market that despite indications that overall revenue remained fairly constant for TRPGs as a segment, the income earned per product and per company became so sub-divided that many (both products & companies) became unprofitable.

A second major factor at work was the consolidation of the distribution tier. When I was selling Legend of the Five Rings in 1996, we had an initial list of North American distributors of about 50. By the end of the decade, that list had shrunk to about a dozen. In fact, virtually every distributor in the market was either sold or closed between 1990 and 1999 – the people who had created the distribution network for TRPGs cashed out to the people who rebuilt it for the CCG business.

This consolidation had an unexpected effect on the TRPG publishers. Every distributor prior to the late 1990s had engaged in a practice whereby they ordered product from TRPG publishers in bulk, and held the inventory in their warehouses to fulfill retailer orders as needed. The standard industry terms were for the distributors to pay the publishers 30 days after receipt of the products. This created cashflow that sustained the publishers – they did not have to wait for every book they printed to sell, they could get the money immediately and transfer the risk of slow sales to the distribution tier. And in addition, every distributor tended to order about 10% more than they could realistically sell, as a hedge against as surprise hit. When the distribution tier consolidated, the publishers suddenly lost tremendous volume in terms of sales and cash. That 10%, multiplied by 50 distributors, was a lot of books. And the distributors that were left were run with much tighter financial policies, leading many to cease pre-paying for inventory and instead asking to hold it “on consignment” – that is, they wanted to pay for the product as they sold it, transferring the risk back to the publishers.

When I took control of the brand & business unit for TRPGs at Wizards of the Coast at the end of 1997, I asked Lisa Stevens to do a market research project to figure out what had really happened in the history of the industry and how we had (collectively) gotten ourselves into the deep hole we found ourselves in.

There were two basic answers revealed by her research.

The first was that the products the industry was producing had become too costly. The boxed set, in particular, was a huge problem. The cost of a boxed set vs. a hardcover book was often a multiple, rather than a percentage. The cost of a hardcover vs. a softcover book was also substantial. In fact, we found several high profile D&D products that were costing the company more to make than the suggested retail price of those products! This issue was endemic throughout the industry, since many publishers assumed they had to “keep up” with TSR in order to be competitive. But TSR wasn’t acting rationally, and had set its suggested retail prices based on its opinion of what the market would pay, not based on what they needed to charge in order to make a profit on the things they were publishing.

In this field, we often use a shorthand pricing system called the “Rule of 5”. Under this rule, you determine the suggested price of a product by multiplying the cost of the product by 5. Factoring in the 3-tier distribution system the industry uses, the result is that the final suggested retail price produces the following divisions:

• 20%: Cost of Goods (the cost of the production of the product, plus the wages paid to people who worked on it and any licenses or royalties)
• 20%: Gross Profit (that is, profit before subtracting all operational costs like salaries, marketing, rent, etc.) to the Publisher
• 20%: Distributor Margin (the gross profit the Distributor earns)
• 40%: Retailer Margin (the gross profit the Retailer earns)

This means that every $1 of cost increases the suggested retail price by $5. Some of the things TSR was doing were adding $10 to the cost of its products – which should have added $50 to the suggested retail prices – easily pushing many of those products into the $100 range. Instead, TSR was just losing money every time it sold one of these products. And the people who made those products never knew, because TSR’s dysfunctional management system hid that information from them. It was not until they got to Wizards of the Coast and had a chance to see the “real numbers” that they realized what had been happening.

The second issue that Lisa’s data revealed led us to our conceptual breakthrough about the business of TRPGs that shaped every decision we made when bringing the 3rd Edition of D&D to the market.

We realized that TRPGs fall into a special class of products & services that generate network effects. In our case, the effect that had the most impact was the concept of the network externality. For TRPGs, the “true value” of the product is not in the book/box that you buy. It is in the network of social connections that you share which enable you to play the game. Without that social network, the game’s value is massively reduced (it becomes literature, and there’s a small market for people who like to just read and never play TRPG content).

We began to view the market not as a series of product pyramids (a core book at the top, and an ever-broadening base of support materials produced over time), but instead as a series of human webs that overlapped and interconnected. Where those webs were strong, the products flourished. Where they were weak, the products failed. The limiting factor to the growth and strength of the TRPG market was not retail stores or shelf space, it was human brains within which these games could interconnect.

The more segmented those brains became, the weaker the overall social network was. Every new game system, and every new variant to those systems, subdivided that network further, making it weaker. Between 1993 and 1999, the social network of the TRPG players had become seriously frayed. Even if you just looked at the network of Dungeons & Dragons players you could see this effect: People self-segmented into groups playing Basic D&D, 1st Edition, 2nd Edition, and within 2nd Edition into various Campaign Settings that had become their own game variants. The effect on the market was that it became increasingly hard to make and sell something that had enough players in common that it would earn back its costs of development and production.

We looked around the industry and saw the same problem at virtually every company that had become successful: White Wolf had 5 World of Darkness games which were all slightly different, surrounded by a more diffuse constellation of games somewhat related to the Storyteller system but designed to be mutually incompatible. FASA had 4 games, none of which shared anything in common. Palladium & Steve Jackson Games both had “house systems” that they tried to use across their entire product lines, but they had ended up with the “Campaign Setting” issue that was bedeviling TSR; the variant rules at the edges of their games were creating independent game networks despite the shared DNA of the core. And we knew that inside every one of those companies they were seeing the same financial information we were seeing: Each new release was selling fewer and fewer copies, and in response, the companies were increasing the pace of releases trying to sustain planned revenues by volume of titles, not by volume of units. And it was killing everyone.

Our analysis lead us to the conclusion that in order to escape this trap, D&D at least had to try and unify its player community around one set of universally acceptable rules. And we had to cut back drastically on the number of different books we were publishing to focus spending on individual titles to drive up profitability. It was literally better to sell 7 copies of one book vs. 5 copies of two different books due to the economies of scale involved.

We hooked that train up to the engine of the Open Gaming License to help spur consolidation of game systems towards a common core, and to enable publishers who wanted to just make a great world or a cool sourcebook to do so without having to first make their own homebrew RPG (and thus fragment the market), and watched the resulting highly entertaining explosion in creativity and revenues in the market starting in 2000.

If you take that list of companies that were active at GenCon in 1994, you have to add all sorts of new names by the time you get to the GenCons of 2001/2: Alderac Entertainment Group, Decipher, Eden Studios, Fantasy Flight Games, Goodman Games, Green Ronin, Guardians of Order, Holistic Design, Kenzer & Co, Malhavoc Press, Mongoose, Necromancer, Pagan Publishing, Pinnacle Entertainment Group, and a host of others that I’m certainly omitting unintentionally. Of course many of these companies were active prior to the OGL/D20 era and many never published D20 products but they all benefited from the resurgence of D&D.

Add to that a number of “indie” RPG companies that were supporting one or two full time designer/publishers like Ron Edwards, Luke Crane, and Vince Baker. The indy RPG segment was getting good advice and learning how to be financially viable via the exchanges on the Forge and other sites dedicated to small press publishing – work that continues to today and has helped create a large number of independently published small TRPGs exploring niches that larger mass-market TRPGs would never have attempted.

Feeding all that activity was an even larger cadre of freelancers than had been in place in the 1990s – the D20 System enabled folks who would never otherwise have tried their hand at commercial design to get paid for their ideas, who joined the pre-existing ranks of freelance creative people working with the major publishers.

Let’s set the high-water mark of the TRPG industry as GenCon 2003, where Wizards released the 3.5 edition of D&D. Shortly thereafter the dominoes started to fall: Incompatibilities between 3.0 and 3.5 meant that a lot of inventory on store shelves became “obsolete” in the minds of customers, resulting in a huge drop in sales and an effort by the retailers to clear that inventory at deep discounts. With the drop in sales came a drop in orders for new products – retailers got skittish about investing more money into a market that was causing them massive headaches.

It’s possible that things could have found a natural bottom at this juncture, and that the market could have rebuilt itself on the 3.5 platform.

Unfortunately, it was never going to get that chance.

At the end of 2004, Blizzard released World of Warcraft. The MMO market which had been considered an interesting curiosity by the tabletop RPG market suddenly exploded. Whereas the previously most successful game (EverQuest) had attracted about 400,000 concurrent paying accounts at the height of its success, World of Warcraft exceeded a million players within 12 months. By the end of 2007, it had more than 5 million players in the US and Europe. An entire new market grew up around World of Warcraft as other companies rushed into the space, quickly creating offerings outside of the basic fantasy of Warcraft, including superheroes, science fiction, cyberpunk, and military history: the very foundations of the TRPG market.

Worse (for the TRPG business) the MMOs also went after young children and engaged them in ways that TRPGs weren’t. Club Penguin, in particular, was so good at getting young kids into its game that Disney bought it for $700 million, and it was reported to have more than 30 million kids playing it.

Almost overnight the TRPG industry suffered two quick body-blows. A large number of people within its network externality left their TRPG groups to focus on MMOs. And instead of receiving the benefits of an acquisition engine generating new players every year, young kids got diverted into MMOs at an age earlier than any suitable TRPG offering, likely establishing a play pattern they’ll keep through to adulthood.

The effects on the TRPG market are now quite visible. At GenCon 2011, the number of companies that were paying full time salaries for TRPG game designer/developers was reduced to a short list: Alderac Entertainment, Kenzer & Co., Fantasy Flight Games, Margaret Weiss Productions, Mongoose, Palladium, Paizo, Steve Jackson Games, White Wolf, Wizards of the Coast, and one or two smaller “indy” publishers. Missing from that list are many of the successful companies that were thriving in 1994 and 2001/2 – lost to the industry as well are the freelancer jobs that those companies used to sustain.

Some of those companies continue to publish as secondary sources of income for their owners: Green Ronin and Pinnacle Entertainment Group are great examples of this phenomenon. But that seems to me to be a very precarious place to operate - the margin for error (or accident) is razor thin.

And the contraction is continuing. Wizards of the Coast has laid off a number of designers, as has White Wolf. Hero Games announced that it is ceasing to operate with a full-time staff. Problems at Catalyst indicate that it may be a while before they’re able to sustain the TRPG businesses they inherited from FASA.

So we see the causes: Rise of MMOs, collapse of retailing, and consolidation of distribution. And we see the effects – loss of jobs, shuttering of companies, and virtually no new startup publishers in the space with a mass audience.

Where Does This End?

My opinion is that the hobby gaming industry is going to transform into a very small niche business. It will cater primarily to an aging group of players who have made TRPGs their lifetime hobbies. As those players age, they’ll need less and less support in the form of commercially produced products. They will instead seek out community support tools to help them remain in touch with their hobby even as the social network they’re directly connected to becomes ever more frayed.

In the Escapist articles I am quoted as saying that this process will be like the evolution of the model train hobby. What I could have been more clear about was that my belief in this transformation is driven not by escalating costs (as in the case with model trains) but instead by the lack of an effective acquisition engine to drive new players into the TRPG hobby, and by the continued subtraction from the TRPG social network caused by MMOs.

As neither of these problems is structural to the TRPG industry, and are both driven by external factors, there’s very little that can be done to counter them directly.

Future Paths

Digital


The first thing that a lot of folks ask for when engaged about the future of the hobby is a virtual table top. It seems kind of obvious – if MMOs are breaking the social network of TRPGs then the way to fight back is to take the TRPG to the MMO’s territory and enable distributed on-line play.

The problem is that VTTs exist, and they’re not successful. If you give people the choice between a VTT and an MMO, they pick the MMO. The VTT doesn’t solve the real problem that is that the MMO experience is simply better for a significant portion of the former TRPG social network. My opinion is that a successful and widely used VTT will remain an elusive mirage despite how much effort is poured into developing them.

That is not to say that there’s no role for digital in the future of the TRPG. Transforming the delivery mechanism of TRPGs into digital products is, I think, the likely evolutionary path. And I’m not talking about just PDFs of printed books – I’m talking about the idea of making a digital product that takes advantage of all that implies to deliver an improved tabletop experience using iPad-type technology.

Conversion to Family Games

I define a Hobby Game as one where (at least one person) spends more time preparing to play the game than actually playing it. For TRPGs that is usually the GM, but often it is players as well. This “out of game time” may be the biggest obstacle to overcome to keeping the TRPG platform competitive.

I think that commercially successful TRPGs of the future will be constructed more like a family game – something that can be unpacked, learned quickly, and played with little prep work. These games will give people a lot of the same joy of “roleplaying” and narrative control that they get from today’s Hobby Game TRPGs but with a fraction of the time investment. Wizards is already experimenting with this format, as is Fantasy Flight Games. It seems like a good bet that there is a substantially profitable business down this line of evolution.

Pathfinder

I will end this essay by talking a bit about Pathfinder and it’s role in the market.

One of the goals of the OGL and the D20 project was to ensure that no single company would ever have the ability to kill Dungeons & Dragons. TSR almost did so; near the end of its existence it had pledged the copyrights and trademarks of the D&D franchise as security against loans it could not afford to repay. Had TSR gone into bankruptcy it is likely that for at least some time, and possibly an extremely lengthy period, nobody would have had the right to publish using that IP while the bankers fought over the carcass of TSR.

The OGL/D20 project also ensured that a version of D&D would exist as of the 3rd Edition version no matter what future incarnation of D&D might be developed. Future versions of D&D would be benchmarked against that milestone, and if the market decided they did not want to switch to the new version, unlike in previous iterations where all commercial support for the previous version would be terminated, the market would be able to keep supporting the version that they preferred. This raises a high bar to future versions of D&D – you have to be so much better than the 3e game that people will voluntarily switch platforms.

Pathfinder has (obviously) become the game that represents that 3rd Edition milestone in the minds of the majority of the players, and is benefiting from the fact that it seems the number of voluntary switches to 4e was less than Wizards had hoped.

Any time a market contracts, a phenomenon is observed which is called a “flight to quality”. This means that the people who remain in a contracting market tend to concentrate their business around the most successful parts of the market, hoping that they’ll be able to ride out the collapse and make it to a future expansionary period. This is what is happening right now with Pathfinder. The social network that was coalesced by the D20 System has been inherited by Pathfinder. Even as the rest of the market is getting smaller, Pathfinder is getting bigger because its attracting all the people who remain interested in the TRPG format.

Paizo, for its part, is still trying to re-start the acquisition engine. The Beginner Box it released this year is the best intro product that the TRPG market has seen in well over a decade (maybe 2 decades). I’m certain that there are kids who got it for Christmas and are right now getting their first taste of the TRPG experience. Hopefully those kids will decide to spend at least a part of their gaming time around the tabletop rather than the MMO virtual worlds. Only time will tell.

My instinct is that Pathfinder will be the lifeboat that the long-term hobbyists will use to keep the social network from fraying past the point of no return. There’s enough people playing it and interacting both locally and virtually that I think it has the momentum it needs to sustain itself even if a total worst case scenario would unfold (Barnes & Noble also fails, and the full line hobby game store ceases to exist). Paizo is doing the right things in making its community and its market one unified whole, which is a great insurance policy against forces beyond its control.

Where Goes D&D?

I’d like to expound on this topic in more detail. Unfortunately, I’m privy to confidential information that makes that impossible at this time. I see the same things you all see – Monte Cook going back to Wizards of the Coast and a general recognition in the market that 4th Edition was not commercially successful. I think that in 2012 I’ll have a lot more to say about D&D, but that will have to wait for a future column. For now I’ll just end by saying that I hope with all my heart that the folks at Wizards of the Coast figure out how to get that franchise righted and back on track, because it would be good for the hobby in general for D&D to become a strong brand again.

--RSD / Atlanta, December 2011
 
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Ryan S. Dancey

Ryan S. Dancey

OGL Architect

smiteworks

Explorer
There is a set up cost to most VTTs. You need to spend some time to get familiar with the software, install it (pretty simple) and sometimes configure your network firewall. People are getting a little more comfortable with that these days due to the large number of online games and the growing number of routers controlling the gateway to the Internet for the entire household.

The biggest problem with preparing a game within the VTT is the time it takes to enter in data when it isn't available. Whenever I prep and run games for systems the publishers license, I can simply drag and drop the NPCs, bad guys, items, etc. onto my story entry or encounter and I'm ready to go. I use Fantasy Grounds to prep and run for all my in person games too because it would simply take me too long to prepare for these in a traditional pen-and-paper sense anymore. Either that, or I'd be flipping back and forth inside monster manuals and core books throughout the whole session. Now, I simply click on the link which brings up the details only as I need it -- or allows me to pick up and roll the attacks with all the bonuses intact. The sad part is that all this already exists for tons of 4E and Pathfinder content, but without a license I can only use it for my personal benefit.

One other plus I forgot to mention about distribution for a VTT is that it allows you to expand into other markets much more easily. You don't have to ship any product overseas when you simply sell the products digitally. We have sales to 79 countries. I'm not sure how big the RPG market is in New Caledonia, but it didn't cost us any more to sell to them than it did to someone in the U.S.
 

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cibet

First Post
Great article Mr. Dancey, thank you. I must wonder though why are you privy to confidential information about D&D that you can't share? Do you work for Hasbro/WoTC in some way? I also wish there was a way to get notified about these articles when you write them. I just happened to stumble across this. I would really like to keep reading your insights into 2012. Maybe put these articles on a personnel blog or something so it is easier to find?

D&D (and now Pathfinder) will live on as long as there are groups of people to play it. My group has been playing regularly (multiple times a month) with the same players for 27 years and counting. We never played 4E, but have played every other version of D&D right up to and including Pathfinder today. While we are clearly the longest running still active group of D&D players on the planet, we would not be so unique if groups of players were as lucky as we are to have all stayed with driving distance of each other since high school. Lack of face to face contact kills more D&D groups than wives (kidding, kidding, sort of). I believe if a group can get together it will find a way to do so. VTT won't replace the "around the table" aspect of the game. Anyone that plays strictly VTT or (especially) PBP knows it's just a pale imitation of an actual face to face game, they just don't have any other choice. VTT will not salvage the game. In fact I believe VTT RPGs will die even before tabletop RPGs do.

So what will save the game? Well what Paizo did with 3E is about the best example. Smaller companies with a focused and consistent (no version changes) product providing publications at premium rates. Call of Cthullu is another great example. D&D will not expand beyond about what it is now in player base but it will remain in publication for some time to come.

As long as the players can get together to play the game there will be a market to sell to. WoTCs big mistake with 4E was moving the game closer to an electronic format and VTT experience. If not for Paizo that move could have killed the game. 4E did not bring a significant number of new players to the game, it drove tons out. Luckily they had somewhere else to go. I'm sure WoTC can correct this with 5E, I'm positive they can. Hasbro just has to either accept the limited but consistent revenue stream 5E will provide or move on entirely. Trying to grow the game beyond the available community will always fail. It truly is and will forever be a niche. If companies want that niche to continue to generate revenue they should find ways to get and keep groups playing together, around a table, locally. Conventions help but the community needs something more consistent and static in location. It needs something likes casinos for tabletop gaming. Places where adults can go to game, drink, eat, socialize, and buy more games. That's pretty much it. I think this niche hobby can be very profitable but it takes a backwards strategy do so: in person communication, paper based physical product, and static locations. I think that is pretty much the opposite of any other modern consumer product. It seems archaic and counter intuitive, but it's true.
 

kargeras

First Post
Desparate attempts to monetize TRPG could kill it.

This article beautifully explains why it's hard - and getting harder - to get rich from selling RPG gear. I would be even more blunt and describe the 4e debacle this way: WotC weren't aiming at improving the game; they were instead trying force the RPG community onto a territory where they would be easier to fleece for cash. One one level you can't blame them. They're a company sailing into a mighty headwind. But on another level, they also have some responsibility to the RPG institution. This is what I read from their 4e moves: We're prepared to salt the earth of TRPGs as we mine out the last available dollar.

What we need now is a plan for how to keep TRPGs vibrant and thrilling even after it becomes unmarketable. Here's how I see that playing out.

We're quickly approaching the era when even board games are basically software. The open source community needs to be ready for this and start writing games for this format.

Most definitely, I will want to do some tabletop fantasy RPG in this setting, but I won't want to do this in WotC's sandbox. (Their inevitable attempt to desperately cash in will be perfectly at odds with what the game needs to be fun, which is opennes, accessibility and customizability.) We'll be crying out for an open source alternative to D&D, one that doesn't force you to run your campaign the WotC way. And since we know this, I hope we start now to think about how the optimal implementation of a fantasy roleplaying game should look.

Timing is important, because companies like WotC will certainly support the integration of user-supported modules and other content, and they'll get armies of creative people basically adding value to their corporate product while they scheme ways to find excuses to pull more money from them and the rest of us. (A part of it will be "new (virtual) rulebooks" to buy - essentially a paid unlock of certain features, monsters, classes and items. And who knows what else they will think of to nickel-and-dime us?)

The alternative we need is an open gaming system, one that is flexible enough to accommodate house rules, patches from volunteers, and the full and unrestricted power of the internet. I think it's really important for the future of social gaming that we start working on this. I picture the basic mechanics of the software would be standard - how it handles dice, or maps and spatial orientation, for example. But then you could load in your selection of mechanics which could resemble some edition of D&D, or something like Hackmaster, or something else that volunteers will write and you can easily customize. I thought of Hackmaster because combat in that game is cumbersome, since it simulates so many details which demand lots of looking up in tables. But once all that is done instantly by the machine, role playing games will be free to simulate all kinds of details that PnP games now can't. You could keep track of exact wound locations, of armor dings, of what collection of items fits or doesn't fit in your backpack, etc.

More important than anything else: We need an open file format for saving user-created modules and environments, whose content would be adaptable to any given campaign's house rules. No way will WotC take the lead on this, but without it, the usefulness any content that volunteers generate will depend on their whims. I would also love to support the creation of a very detailed fantasy world-setting, as a competitor to Forgotten Realms or whatever. It could be called "The Free Kingdoms", a setting in the larger framework project called "Open Lands" or something like that. I already have some original content for this, and I'm the faculty advisor of a large gaming club in a state college. Many of the geeks there would definitely make some excellent contributions, and there are millions just like them around the world!

Right now, no outside party has any say over how you play PnP games - what rules you enforce, what edition of books you use or don't use, etc. That will end once games become corporate software, which has the power to force you to play the WotC way. The future of fantasy roleplaying is about to swoop in, and you know that companies will try to rob it of its fantastic openness and lack of restrictions in order to make money. A concerted movement has to oppose this. An open system will have the big advantage of not having to impose artificial restrictions on play, because these are necessary only for reasons of DRM or making room for paid content. So we can have a better product without necessarily having bigger budgets or better authors, just like Wikipedia is by far the best encyclopedia. But we need to be thinking about this before everyone forgets what truly unrestricted role-playing was like.

What we need first is for the wonder to return to game worlds, and this will happen when we can generate free and deep fantasy content, beginning with the "Free Kingdoms" setting. First we need at least a partial cannonical theology and metaphysics, much of which could be adapted from Gygax works. Next: Geography. Then: Detailed history. Content work on the Free Kingdoms should begin at least 500 years before the time of the gaming era, and lots of thought at a high level of detail should be given to the interaction of the aboriginal cultures and gods, as well as external influences. The theology must be fixed first, because that, more than anything, will form the template for culture. To maximize game-world openness, the game setting needs a recent cataclysmic collapse. Games in the aftermath of a collapse will leave enough freedom for characters to be their own masters, and also seed the world with many forgotten pockets of unconsolidated or unlooted treasure.

Once the development of this setting is underway, fans will be invited to flesh out the content, create modules, write fan fiction, make fan art, etc. The result will be in Wiki form, moderated by a volunteer Consulate of Canonicity. They will make sure that canonized content is of high quality and overall internal consistency.

In parallel to this, open-source game software would be developed for running actual gaming sessions. This would be a big task, but a compelling and open-sourced Free Kingdoms setting would definitely help with the enthusiasm. With modern development tools, six clever, dedicated people could bring such a project quite far. The focus would be on compatibility, customizability and connectivity. You should be able to adventure in the Open Lands using a rule set of your choosing, and fan-generated modules should appear in a format which makes them playable with a variety of rules. 3rd party tools like Skype could be leveraged for virtual presence. A rendered "what your character sees" screen would be perfectly feasible, and could be done with GPL rendering engines like Doom3. It wouldn't have to be pretty to be good. If decent community development tools got made, entire regions could be rendered and canonized.

This is how tabletop role playing should look in the future - this is how to bring the magic back. However, this is exactly what will never happen if we leave the initiative with WotC or any other profit-driven company. Their #1 priority is not (and can't be) to create an excellent game experience. It's to permanently leave you feeling that something is missing, something that your money might fix. That's the Farmville model, and it's what digital D&D will become. The true spirit of TRPG is exactly the opposite: It's the feeling that you can freely do anything and go anywhere. This spirit can only survive if there is an open alternative once TRPGs transition to a digital format, and it's up to us the community to make that happen.
 

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