Because WotC said they want to "support their settings."
Sure, but by "support" they don't mean "spend money in ways that does not generate viable returns"!
Less than a week ago, I read this in the
ENworld summary of a Chris Perkins interview:
* Their goal is to "challenge people's expectations" re: sourcebooks
* They're "not interested in releasing books for the sake of releasing books anymore"
* They want book releases to be events that will "surprise and delight people"; they also want to put out books that people will actually use rather than books that will just get put on a shelf to "stay there and slowly rot"
"One of our creative challenges is to package [setting] material - reintroduce facts and important details about our worlds - in a way that we know that DMs and players are going to use, that's going to excite them, that's actually going to surprise them. We may get that content out, but I'm not going to guarantee it's going to be a book. I'm not going to guarantee that it's going to be anything that you've seen before. But it will be something."
They're not going to publish books just because some potential customers want the content. They're going to release information in other ways. Clearly a major constraint is going to be financial.
Quick, where do I find the 5e stats for a Draconian? Where is the PC racial stats for a mul? What happened to Callimshan after the Sundering? There is no answer for this stuff. These are fairly important things for people playing Dragonlance, Dark Sun, or the Realms. That's not support.
The Realms metaplot I don't know anything about, but given that all the modules for 5e (including many of the later ones for the playtest) are set in the Realms I would have thought that support is happening. And a quick Google for "Forgotten Realms novels" led me to
this site, which tells met that 4 FR novels are due this year. Maybe they will tell us about what happened to Callimshan after the Sundering.
As for the stats for a Draconian or a mul, the time-honoured tradition is to make it up! What number of D&D groups do you think is out there who
would be playing Dragonlance, or Dark Sun, except for that fact that WotC has not supplied them with stats for a Draconian or a mul? Furthermore, for $19.99 you can buy the 4e Dark Sun book from DriveThru and convert the mul stats across if you want to. (Or, if you find it easier to convert from AD&D, the 2nd ed boxed set is $9.99.)
From WotC's point of view, if a few stat blocks like this are really all that is at issue, I imagine it would be cheaper for them to do another UA down the track (a bit like the Eberron one) then actually author and publish a book.
Paraphrasing the same old arguments:
'Wanting WotC to make stuff for you is [perjorative]. Make your own stuff.'
Well, yeah, and I could write all my own books and never read someone else's book again. OR I could read WotC AND write my own stuff. It's weird how the two aren't actually incompatible.
'Wanting WotC to make stuff for you is [perjorative]. There's lots of other stuff that WotC doesn't make.'
Well, yeah, and I read that stuff too. Once again, one does not exclude the other.
'Be a passive consumer. Don't rock the boat. Take what WotC gives you. Be grateful for what you have; don't ask for more.'
No.
None of those is a fair or accurate paraphrase of what I posted.
I don't care if you want more stuff or not. If WotC published an updated GH map, there's a good chance I would buy it, to add to the half-dozen other GH maps I already own.
I don't care if you ask WotC to publish stuff or not, though I think it's unrealistic to expect them to publish stuff at a loss. Particularly in relation to settings, where they have institutional memory of how publishing setting material at a loss was a contributing factor in the bankruptcy of their predecessor.
I was responding to the claim that playing D&D in GH is not supported. And that claim is not true. There is a vast range of products (I pointed to them upthread) currently available at good prices. If you want to play D&D in GH, buy one of those products. If you already own them, then you already have the support you need: use it.
When I started a new fantasy campaign recently, I wanted to use Greyhawk as the backdrop. So I pulled all my old Greyhawk stuff down of the shelf (where it had sat, largely undisturbed, for several years) and had a look over the maps and some of the geographical descriptions.
I knew that one of my PCs was a forest-dwelling sorcerer-assassin, and another was a mage who was a member of a sorcerous cabal and had lived in a tower in arid hills overlooking rough and arid countryside. And I knew I wanted to run a scenario with nautical elements.
So I started the game in Hardby: its a seaport whose ruler is a Gynarch (hence sorcerous cabals), that is close to both the Abor-Alz (arid hills with towers in them) and the Gnarley Forest (a suitable origin point for a sorcerer-assassin).
The material provided me with the support I needed: maps, geographical descriptions, and some NPCs (the Gynarch of Hardby). Anyone who doesn't have that stuff on shelf can buy it from DriveThru and get the same support for their game.
That's support for playing D&D (or any other fantasy RPG) in Greyhawk.
EDIT: some of the above ninja'd by [MENTION=6701829]Trickster Spirit[/MENTION].