Yaarel
🇮🇱 🇺🇦 He-Mage
Maybe the weird language and abundant pages are to try distract people from the two sentences that matter?I think our perspectives differ here a bit Mr P. I agree that the language we're seeing does not look very legal, but everything we're getting from those who have seen OGL 1.1 seems to show a very high degree of correspondence between the language in the press release and the language in the licence. We can say as lawyer guys "But this language makes no legal sense! They're torpedoing their own position!" - but if their real goal is intimidation of 3PPs into abandoning OGL 1.0, NOT creating an effective legal document for the courtroom, I think it makes a lot more sense.
I see two interacting possibilities:
1. Externally, they are focused on scaring people, not on creating something legally effective. It's never intended to stand up in court.
2. Internally, there is weird stuff going on, perhaps akin to what I saw with TSR in the mid 90s. The TSR staff lawyer I spoke with was saying things that legally made no sense. It seems he was enacting the will of his Dark Mistress. TSR was in a sort of Fuhrer Bunker mentality at the time. In this case WoTC's leadership may be (a) consumed with hatred of open gaming (b) promised the investors to end the 'under monetisation', and this weird document & strategy is primarily about how it looks to the investors.
"This agreement is, along with the OGL: Non-Commercial, an update to the previously available OGL 1.0(a), which is no longer an authorized license agreement. We can modify or terminate this agreement for any reason whatsoever, provided We give thirty (30) days’ notice. We will provide notice of any such changes by posting the revisions on Our website, and by making public announcements through Our social media channels."