Hi, all--
If you're reading a story in the news and getting worked up about whether little details (like, does the product actually exist or not) are accurate, boy, you're barking up the wrong tree.
I've been dealing with the media for five or ten years and have been interviewed for or covered in hundreds of news stories. What makes this story a rarity isn't the number of errors it contains--it's that it's an actual, written story, not a word-for-word regurgitation of a press release or the first semi-relevant quote the writer stumbled upon.
Don't get too hot and bothered about journalistic accuracy--it frankly doesn't exist, even at the higher-end institutions like the BBC. And, truthfully, the finer points don't matter to the vast majority of this article's readers. What does matter is that D&D got a high level of largely positive, level-headed exposure that points out how the property is continuing to grow and remain strong in the current age.