The Fate of D20 Modern

I think it's most likely a 'faction' thing. The folks in charge of the GI Joe IP at Hasbro might be all 'I don't think giving OUR IP to those 'gamer geeks' will benefit the GI Joe IMAGE!'

Granted, I think SOMEONE would give his first born (and second/third, and parts of their anatomy) for the chance to license it.

But then.. It might just be put on hold till the GI Joe movie comes out and someone gets a clue.
 

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Here's the solution:

The Wizards guys schedule a 12 hour meeting with the Hasbro guys, and all they do is write DUDE GI JOE! in huge letters on a white board again and again until they break their will.
 

Actually, the solution has 2 steps.

Step 1: License GI Joe for collectible mini's game ala DDM.

Then when that takes off

Step 2: Do the RPG using 4e ruleset

C'mon

Defender
Leader
Striker
Controller


Screams GI Joe
 





Maybe something you ignored. At least it was quite a big here in Finland in the 80's/ early 90's.

I googled for pictures - Action Figures? Nah, I didn't play with Barbies for boys. ;) (Well, to be honest, I think my mother wouldn't have let me play with such militaristic stuff. There was the day, at the flea marked, my father was a slightly little drunk, and I convinced him to buy a set of game tanks and vehicles... Well, the vehicles that couldn't be recolored to "demilitarize" them disappeared in the trash... ;) )

I used a bit of Playmobile, lots Matchbox and SIKU cars and even more Lego.
 

Maybe something you ignored. At least it was quite a big here in Finland in the 80's/ early 90's.

With all due respect, Finland is so far off the beaten track when it comes to "European culture" that it might as well in Asia. Things that flop spectacularly in the rest of Europe do well there, and music that's been dead for literally decades in the US/Europe is alive and well there (not that there's anything wrong with that - but you can't assume what's true in Finland is true anywhere else in Europe). So no, not something he ignored unless he's a fellow Finn.

In the rest of Europe, GI Joe, including the UK, made a few half-hearted attempts to succeed, but winked back out of existence pretty rapidly. I understand it did ok in Israel and a few other places, though.

So it is indeed essentially an American thing, with a few other random nations. You'd have had to make an effort to track it down in the UK. Things like Thundercats, MASK (yes even MASK), He-Man, Transformers and so on utterly eclipsed it here.

I do hope that WotC do SOME kind of modern-style game, because the 4E-style of game, albeit minus the obsession with position/repositioning and minis, ideal for a modern-day/futuristic "cinematic"-style game. Metagaming-style stuff, which can feel a bit dodgy in the confused-as-to-whether-it's-cinematic-or-not world of D&D is perfect for that. I think you could more or less fold Defender and Controller into one in a modern-day setting, I'd suggest, too (given that a Ranged Defender would essentially resemble a Controller).
 

I googled for pictures - Action Figures? Nah, I didn't play with Barbies for boys. ;) (Well, to be honest, I think my mother wouldn't have let me play with such militaristic stuff. There was the day, at the flea marked, my father was a slightly little drunk, and I convinced him to buy a set of game tanks and vehicles... Well, the vehicles that couldn't be recolored to "demilitarize" them disappeared in the trash... ;) )

I used a bit of Playmobile, lots Matchbox and SIKU cars and even more Lego.

GI Joe was originally a WW2 era comic book series. In the 80s it was remade as a futuristic military action cartoon. This was one of the first successful hyper marketing ventures. The cartoon was used to sell toys. Every once in a while they would add new stuff to the cartoon, so you would have to buy the latest set of toys, etc. This method of marketing was eventually perfected with Power Rangers and Pokemon' reinventing themselves every year, with an all new set of merchandise. It was quite popular, but looking back the production qualities were poor at best.

Re: parental intervention. Wow, never had that happen with any of my weaponry related toys. But most kids that I grew up with had their own rifle by the time they reached 10. However my first set of gaming books was destroyed because it contained "satanic" references like magic and dragons.
 

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