D&D 5E D&D Head Talks Future Plans (Sort Of)

WotC has launched a new design blog. The first edition is written by D&D head Ray Winninger, and he talks a little about future plans.

dnd_header_blog04.jpg


"Later in the year, Chris will return with our big summer adventure, James Wyatt will deliver a substantially improved version of a concept that I initiated myself, and Amanda Hamon will close us out with a project that was jointly conceived by herself and several other studio members. As usual, Jeremy Crawford is working with all of our leads, overseeing mechanical content and rules development.

In addition to these five major products, look for a couple of additional surprises we’ll unveil in the months ahead."

You can read the full blog here:


He also mentions that a D&D book takes 12-14 months to make, and half the projects developed don't make it to market. Winninger describes the structure of WotC's 'D&D Studio':

"The D&D Studio itself is organized into four departments: Game Design, Art, Production, and Product Management, each led by a department head. Game Design is responsible for the developing game mechanics and stories. Art establishes the “look and feel” of Dungeons & Dragons by creating visual concepts, directing our freelance illustrators, and creating innovative graphic designs. The Production department manages our project schedules, interfaces with manufacturing experts, and generally handles administrative matters for the studio. The Product Management department interfaces with sales, marketing, and market research. They also own our long-term product roadmap and look after the D&D business."

The studio has five Product Leads: Jeremy Crawford, Amanda Hamon, Chris Perkins, Wes Schneider, and James Wyatt.
 

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doctorbadwolf

Heretic of The Seventh Circle
Oh boy, here we go again...

Nearly everyone I know likes stuff like Warhammer 40k or Age of Sigmar. Different strokes for different blokes.
Feel free to explain why you think this is relevant to what you’re replying to.
Did you ever hear of this tabletop game called Dungeons & Dragons? Its gots its roots in wargaming from Chainmail as a hacked version of that system. Its also very team-based where your unit composition, I mean party composition, mattered. Should try it sometime. Like as a factoid, that is where magic missles comes from. It was a hold over from chainamil which had missle attacks.
😂

My dude, I’ve been playing for over 20 years, I know about D&D. None of your BS patronizing addresses anything I said. 🤷‍♂️
 

(Sorry if discussed, only read the first couple of pages)

Anybody else wonder how you have leads and 4 departments? So who is sitting in a corner office yet has no windows?
 

I think it's a "cost/risk" when several artists do the art vs 1-2 - the art style is less unified, and you are probably going to get a few stinkers... but on the other hand, the odds of you getting a few great ones are much higher too.

When I was 13, this was... perfection View attachment 140406
Always loved that piece. Five villains ganging up on an infant gold dragon for a shoebox of loot! Maybe the women can afford pants now.
 





eyeheartawk

#1 Enworld Jerk™
Reynolds doesn't have enough speed lines to be secretly Rob liefeld
I would agree that the number of pouches is Liefeldian, but the lack of backgrounds that are just cross hatching and the ability to draw feet distinguishes him from our man Rob.

Now, when it comes to wearing Levi's button flies while slamming a Dew and wearing a backwards hat, Rob's your guy.
 
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