Didn't I deserve a better response from TSR er Wizards than this? I thought they had grown up a bit and ditched the restrictive policies of TSR. I thought wrong. Anyway, I will talk with my money - instead of buying 3.5 (2nd printing) when it comes out, I'll just keep playing Exalted or 3.0.
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Quality Standards have been added to the d20 System License because we want to enhance the value of the d20 Logo for all publishers in addition to maintaining it as a symbol of rules compatibility. Furthermore, products bearing the d20 Logo are associated with, refer to, and reflect upon the quality of our own d20 System games and brands. By ensuring that d20 products adhere to certain standards we improve and protect the quality of the d20 brand, for us and for everyone who uses it.
These standards are not specific to the d20 System License. All our other licensees are held to similar or tighter standards. However, users of the d20 license are not subject to the same review process faced by direct licensees and the implementation of these standards does not change that.
**Please quote this e-mail in any reply.**
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Darrin
Wizards of the Coast - Customer Service
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-----Original Message-----
From: Patrick Mallette [mailto

atrickmallette@rogers.com]
Sent: Monday, September 08, 2003 7:52 PM
To: Wizards Customer Service
Subject: d20 License Change
Hi, I have a problem with the quality standard clause in the d20 System Trademark Guide version 4.0. First I would like to give you a few facts about who I am:
I am not a professional game developer.
I have been a gamer since I was 8 years old (23 years and counting).
I am a mature, responsible adult with three children and another one on the way.
My children are growing up as part time gamers.
I teach my children what is right and what is wrong.
I will determine what they can and cannot view.
I teach them to be accepting of others.
I teach them where to draw the line in controlling their behavior.
I read an opinion piece on EnWorld.com on Monday, September 08, 2003 that caused me to investigate this issue for myself. I completely disagree with what you are asking the developers to do with their work and your desire to censor their work.
With regards to violence and gore, I have seen far worse images that haunt me to this day provided on the news daily without any warnings about their nature. Static images of fantasy violence and gore do not bother me what so ever. It might be better to suggest companies provide a warning of their graphic nature on the book and to state that any mature content is theirs and theirs alone and in no way suggests that Wizards or Hasbro in no way supports or condones graphic violence and the like. Let the consumer (ME) decide for myself. If I do not like materials such as that I will not buy them, nor would I buy them for my children until they are mature enough. It is rash, overwhelming clauses and limitations like this that make watching episodes of Bugs Bunny or the Road Runner today impossible due to the amount of violent material they cut; they lack the continuity they once possessed. It was also measures like this that led to the demise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles; a boy got lost in some sewers emulating them so they were taken off the air rather than forcing the mother to teach the child what he sees on the television is not always real.
Sexual themes are entirely as despicable as the prude making the ruling on what is and what is not indecent or pornographic. My children realize what a penis is, what breasts are as they should from my teachings. I don't need to make up words such as pecker to describe a penis - it's a medical term get over it. My daughter knows what her vagina is so that if she has problems with it she can tell us, rather than leaving us guessing whether she means her but or her who who dilly. They are being taught to laugh and get over any silliness at seeing such things when they are flashed in movies or on more liberal French stations. They have their purpose, "get used to it you'll see a lot more and a lot worse when you're older." With respect to sexuality I personally do not want my children growing up in a box thinking that their bodies and any sexual act is taboo. They have their time and place, which is at the moment a long way off. It is something that people do with each other to recreate or to have fun. Sure I don't want to see pictures of a demon raping a woman and I certainly don't want my children seeing that so I and I alone will censor the material I buy. I don't need things precensored, I'm quite capable of performing that myself.
Prejudice is a part of life unfortunately and some people really are inferior. A quadriplegic cannot lift as much weight as I can, just like I cannot lift as much as a professional bodybuilder. I am more intelligent and thus more capable than a mentally handicapped person, but there are just as many more people more intelligent and capable than I am. These can often be tools or adventure hooks that make an effective part of the story. Sure no one wants to see an Al Queda d20 RPG where you go yank hunting, which is exactly what boycotts and controlled spending are all about. If you think a product is over the top, don't buy it and when the product dies a sad pathetic death with next to no sales that company will learn. If enough of these products fail guess what? The industry learns and stops catering to a marginal group of psychopaths or those companies go under.
You are not a valid censor for myself or my family so please stop turning off my television for me, stop burning books before I make up my own mind, get out of my bedroom, stop telling my children they will go blind when they play with themselves, stop telling me everyone is equal you communist pig because I know that you think you are more equal than I am and that is why you think you and your company deserve the right to censor everyone else.
PLEASE go back to doing what you do best and make some damn good modules, make some excellent reference books, spend more time fleshing out campaign settings, and less time worrying if I'll get offended at the sight of a triple breasted Marilith.
P.S. During the entire second edition when you changed the names of demons and devils to Tanar'ri and Baatezu my group and many others still called them demons and devils. We were mature enough to know they aren't real. It was a great relief to think that the gaming industry had grown up finally when White-Wolf produced their Vampire books, and when D&D 3.0++ had come out and restored the names of things such as demons and devils. Please grow up and stop catering to religious zealots that have nothing else better to do than waste your time and make our gaming experience less enjoyable by forcing us to play in a Disney sponsored hell. If you don't understand that comment watch any Disney movie - they're all the same underneath - and then watch a real Japanese animae show or movie like Akira (or Sailor moon, but without her body being covered in sparkles when she transforms).
I may only be speaking for myself, but I purchased several hundreds of dollars worth of d20 products, specifically D&D 3.0. I am going to purchase D&D 3.5 basically everything that is currently out there around Christmas. My eldest son would like his own copy of the core rules to read as his home reading exercise. I am also planning on getting a copy of the core books for him. When I play with my gaming group (ages 21-45) we often have mature topics involved to add flavor to the storyline and hardships to the characters - overall making for a much more rewarding gaming session. Please don't make me show my displeasure with your company in a financial method, but if you do I will of course keep using my D&D 3.0 books despite their flaws or perhaps go back to Vampire the Masquerade or White-Wolf's games. I would much rather take out my displeasure on companies making low quality products (far too may examples to list here).
Thank you.
Patrick Mallette
Quote taken from d20 System Trademark Guide version 4.0 to which I am referring in my letter:
Quality Standards
In determining whether a product complies with community standards of decency, Wizards of the Coast uses, but is not limited to the following. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Wizards of the Coast reserves the right to determine, in its sole discretion, whether a product complies with community standards of decency.
Violence and Gore - Descriptions of combat are acceptable in a Covered Product. However art or text depicting excessively graphic violence or gore is not acceptable.
Sexual Themes - Sexual situations-including abuse and pornography-may not appear graphically in art or text. When depicting the human form-or creatures possessing humaniform features-gratuitous nudity, the depiction of genitalia, bare female nipples, and sexual or bathroom activity is not acceptable. While sensuality and sexuality may appear in a Covered Product, it must not be the focus nor can it be salacious in nature.
Prejudice - Covered Products can not depict existing real-world minorities, nationalities, social castes, religious groups, genders, lifestyle preferences, or people with disabilities as a group inferior to any other group. Current, real-world religions and religious groups and/or practices will not be portrayed in any way that promotes disrespect for these religions or their participants. A Covered Product can not endorse or promote any specific religion or religious practice.
Quote taken from THE D20 SYSTEM TRADEMARK LICENSE VERSION 5.0 to which I am referring in my letter:
4. Quality Standards
The nature of all material You use or distribute that incorporates the Licensed Articles must comply with all applicable laws and regulations, as well as community standards of decency, as further described in the d20 System Guide. You must use Your best efforts to preserve the high standard and goodwill of the Licensed Trademarks. In order to assure the foregoing standard and quality requirements, Wizards of the Coast shall have the right, upon notice to You, to review and inspect all material released by You that uses the Licensed Articles. You shall fully cooperate with Wizards of the Coast to facilitate such review and inspection, including timely provision of copies of all such materials to Wizards of the Coast. Wizards of the Coast may terminate this License immediately upon attempted notice to you if it deems, in its sole discretion, that your use of the Licensed Articles does not meet the above standards.