OSR OSR News Roundup

If there's one constant in the universe it is that older people will look at younger people, cluck disapprovingly, and make some comment about "kids these days." I, for one, really enjoy 80s and 90s hip hop and rap. Disregard for copyright is not new.
A lot of samples in the 80s were licensed, bear in mind. I was watching a YT video yesterday on famous samples and it noted that James Brown made a point of re-releasing some of his songs which had gotten popular for sampling (like Funky Drummer) in formats which made them easier to sample, to encourage the practice and get paid.
 

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A lot of samples in the 80s were licensed, bear in mind. I was watching a YT video yesterday on famous samples and it noted that James Brown made a point of re-releasing some of his songs which had gotten popular for sampling (like Funky Drummer) in formats which made them easier to sample, to encourage the practice and get paid.

When JayZ released an a cappella version of The Black Album it felt like he was practically begging somebody to remix it. And when DJ Dangermouse did exactly that, mixing samples from it and the Beatles' "White Album" to make The Grey Album, lawyers for the Beatles rights (I can't remember who owned them at the time) went nuts, while lawyers for JayZ were curiously silent.

(I'm not particularly a JayZ fan, but the Grey Album is freaking brilliant. Anybody not familiar with it should go track it down RIGHT NOW.)
 

I suspect that a deep read of DTRPG would turn up a veritable cornucopia of copyright infringement, some purposeful, most probably done in ignorance.
The authors of one 3.5 OGL game I bought seemed completely unaware that there were some creatures in the Monster Manual that weren't open content.

I'm not even sure they understood the point I was making when I asked them about the use of Yuan-Ti in their product. This was back in 2009. It's still available on Drivethru and as far as I'm aware it's still got Yuan-Ti as a major race in their setting.

Ironically, they disabled the print option on the PDF, as they were worried about people printing it out and illegally sharing hard copies of their work.
 

Welcome to the third news Roundup in April. It's a dry, dry month here, with temperatures way above normal, perfect for hanging out indoors and checking out some new games!

  • I don't know how I missed this, but Johan Nohr, the driving force behind Mork Borg, is raising funds for Fomoria, their game of folk horror. The campaign is well and funded, and is almost over at the time this goes live, but I wanted to make sure to get a mention of it in.
  • Simon Taylor is raising funds for The Cohort, an adventure for Mothership where the PCs are tasked with tracking down missing corporate employees.
  • Another Mothership adventure currently funding is Red Shift, an adventure where the earth's first colony ship has just been found, drifting through empty space, three centuries after it left the solar system.
  • The Mimic's Vault has just released Tarotweaver, a tarot-powered game inspired by Cairn, His Majesty the Worm, Over the Garden Wall, and more.
  • Mac, of Mac's Makes Games, has just released Under an Atomic Sky, a campaign hexcrawl for their NUKED! post-apocalyptic setting.
  • When the Shimmer Fades is a free adventure for Shadowdark. Themed around corruption and loss of faith, it's an adventure for character levels 2-4, set in a town where greed led to sacrilege.
  • Agamemnon Press has released their long-awaited (by me, at least!) Empire of Bones supplement in pdf on Drivethru. It's written for their fantastic Painted Wastelands setting, and looks at a city ruled by necromancers. The art is stunning.
  • Tales from the Locker, Issue 1, is the inaugural volume of what is planned to be a regular fanzine for Pirate Borg.
  • The prolific and talented Games Omnivorous has released The Flying Lootsman, an adventure for FLAIL!, in which a pirate with a flying ship is terrorizing the land, and it is up to the PCs to stop them and possibly claim the ship as their own.
  • Barrel Rider Games has released White Box: Dungeon Adventures, a sort of starter set for their line of White Box retroclones.
  • Mean Gits & Flashy Bitz is a supplement for Orc Borg that includes more classes, random tables, and guns. It does pretty much what you think it does.
  • Another in the ever-growing list of Borg hacks is Shark Borg: Bloodwater Preview, a PWYW introduction to the game. I'm not exactly clear what the game does, just that it has a lot of sharks in it, which is never a bad thing.
  • It's been awhile since I've seen anything by False Machine, but they've just released Gackling Moon, a gazetteer of sorts, written for the Gackling Moon setting.
  • David Okum has released Star Borg: Dreadfire Sector, a look at a region in space written for Star Borg, with a setting introduction, new classes, races, and a mini-adventure.
  • Depthwalker, an Enemy for Mork Borg, does pretty much what is says on the tin, presents a one-page, PWYW enemy (an animate old-timey diving suit) for Mork Borg encounters.
  • Written for Ad Astra and CY_BORG, EUPNEUS is a setting/adventure/campaign set in the depths of space, and includes a tone of material.
  • Almost exactly three years after I funded the original print run of the Into the Wild Omnibus I've started up a new Kickstarter to fund a reprint, as I'm now down to my last dozen or so copies. The Omnibus combines A Guide to Thieves' Guilds, Filling in the Blanks, and Into the Wild into a single book, and is all ready to be sent to the printers as soon as the campaign ends.
  • I'm pleased to announce the Sabre is now fulfilling the US orders for Forbidden Psalms, the minis game based off of Mork Borg. You can purchase directly from the Forbidden Psalms US webstore, or through Sabre Games and Cards.
 

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