BryonD
Hero
Yep, its WotC's "You are either with us or against us" day.DaveMage said:From an RPG fan perspective, I don't. "My way or the highway" doesn't entice me (as a fan/consumer) to go along for the ride. YMMV, of course.
Yep, its WotC's "You are either with us or against us" day.DaveMage said:From an RPG fan perspective, I don't. "My way or the highway" doesn't entice me (as a fan/consumer) to go along for the ride. YMMV, of course.
Yeah I know. Thanks for the reply.Orcus said:I have no intent of doing that. We are 4E.
Mouseferatu said:I don't think anyone who actually thinks it through should be mad at WotC.
Orcus said:I believe, in fact, that it is even a bit more restrictive than people are seeing. It is not just that you cant mix the two licenses in one product. It is that if you use the GSL you cannot also use the OGL for 3E products.
In other words, publishers have to decide if they want to stay 3E or if they want to come along for the 4E ride.
TheLe said:That sounds quite absurd. So, if I go with 4e, I am not allowed to do True20, Mutants and Masterminds, 3e, Spycraft, etc? My company is essentially locked into to 4e?
Is this right?
Are they also going to tell us that we can't publish our own Role Playing Games too? So if I publish 4e games, it means I cannot release my own new self contained RPG (with OGL): "Unorthodox Insurance Salesman: The Role Playing Game"?
I was thinking about making a board game some day -- maybe WOTC can put a new clause in the 4e license to prevent me from doing that too.
`Le
BryonD said:But this is a blatant attempt to burn and pillage and salt the fields of the Open Gaming Community. I think it is ok to be mad at that kind of destructive move.
This is, frankly, a step backwards from the spirit of Open Gaming. I tend to get upset whenever anything moves from a paradigm of more freedom to less freedom. Basically demanding that companies give up the OGL if they want to use the GSL at all (to say nothing of all of the other restrictions built in) just rubs me the wrong way on principle alone.
That's not even taking into account that, as a fan, I like 3.5 and want companies to stick with it. Now there will be less of that, because companies that would be inclined to do both 3.5 and 4E material won't have that option.
Orcus said:So this hypothetical choice that people see as being taken away is just that, a hypothetical choice.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.