What it is about and such
Cergorach said:
For us who work on such a 'project', it isn't about 'free stuff' it's about:
- utility (searchable text, copyable text, etc.)
- standards (avoiding dozens of different rules that cover the same thing)
- accessibility (electronic formats allow different means of accessing them, rules can be 'read' by blind people)
- availability (some good books are out of print, releasing OGC prevents scarry ebay prices)
I'm also of the opinion that there are way to many 'publishers' out there that are putting out substandard products. Releasing good OGC verbatim means that there will be a lot of substandard 'publishers' that won't sell their crappy stuff, eventually getting it that they should stay away from 'publishing', making more room for the good publishers. Also by releasing OGC from crappy publishers means that people will see what kind of crap they are getting before they buy. This might seem outrageous, but if applied correctly might make the D20 market a lot more attractive for quality publishers. Some people still curse the day that Fast Forward Entertainment was summoned to the D20 market by a Malkavian, if they had only known what they where buying...
Well, if that's why you're doing it, I guess that's what the "spirit" of OGC means to you. Your points all sound pretty reasonable to me. Please note that I never said that I thought you were doing it for "free stuff" - all I was saying was that if somone was doing it for that reason, it wasn't in
what I consider to be the "spirit" of OGC. It is all just my opinion, anyway - people are free to do as they please (within the limits of just laws, of course). Gamers tend to be a pretty independent and opinionated group and I wouldn't dream of trying to force my opinion (or will) on any of them.
Personally, I'm glad WOTC put most of the book out as OGC - that allows us to consider the incorporation of some great mechanics (e.g. sanity) into future products.
I personally owe WOTC some gratitude anyway - without OGL, very few people would be producing anything. Some folks may not think it is the best system, but it is an OPEN system. I can't remember many small publishers in the late 70s and 80s putting out DnD compatible materials - Judges Guild is about the only one that comes to mind, although a few small companies did put out modules (where hit points were referred to as htk [hits-to-kill] and such nonsense). As a result, I've got a closet full of completely unrelated RPGs that rarely get touched (Runequest, Traveller, GURPs, Call of Cthulhu, Thieves Guild, etc). Back then, even if there was a great system (I love Chaosium's), it was proprietary and therefore off-limits.
I agree with you about substandard publishers - unfortunately, mediocre businesses exist in every sector of life. One of the primary reasons we decided to produce our own stuff was because we were dissatisfied with what we were seeing - we wanted "more realistic" elements than the market was providing.
However - that said, one person's "crap" is another person's treasure. For example, I wouldn't dream of telling a munchkin or power-gamer who prefers playing minotaur sorcerers with pierced tongues and +25 mithril horns of virility that they are wrong - they just like something different. Neither would I dream of becoming a member of the Planetary Publishing Police, dedicated to eradicating "crappy publishers" everywhere

Between my professional career, running a couple side-businesses, writing, my family, and gaming, I just don't have the time (or interest) - if I don't like something, I either a) won't buy it or b) if I already bought it, will be much more cautious when buying future products from that publisher. But if policing the shelves is somone's bag, more power to them. No skin off my back - if someone likes what I'm selling, they'll buy it. If not, they won't, regardless of the existance of OGC/OGL/PI/GNU/CL. Free will.
I do have the advantage of commuting through Orlando almost every month, where I can peruse the shelves of
Sci-Fi City to determine which products look like they're worth the money - I might well have a different viewpoint if I were buying everything sight-unseen through Amazon (or somewhere like that).
To summarize: I suspect that if a publisher keeps producing "crap", the market will take care of them sooner or later, with or without my help. Most of the small publishers are probably just fulfilling a personal goal or dream, anyway, rather than trying to create an industry-swallowing behemoth.