TSR TSR3 Throws In Towel, Rebrands Wonderfilled

In the news story that never ends, after reversing its position earlier and admitting that it was NOT the original TSR reincarnated, the new TSR company, embroiled in acrimony for the last two weeks, and having blamed the widespread criticism it has received on Wizards of the Coast, has deleted its own Twitter account and rebranded its website, misspelling it’s own name in the process.

In just a week a much-loved trademark, which was associated with the creation of our entire hobby, and which generally attracted nostalgic affection as recently as a fortnight ago, has been utterly trashed in an astonishing display of self-destructive publicity and incompetence. Two companies (one of which was directly responsible for the damage) have now divested themselves of it, and most major conventions have banned the company behind it, due to the actions and statements of three people: Justin LaNasa, Stephen Dinehart, and Ernie Gygax. "TSR" is no longer a brand which anybody wants to be associated with — not even the company which ‘relaunched’ it two weeks ago, let alone the company they sniped it from. It has been a spectacular masterclass in how not to manage a brand.

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This followed an astonishing day of activity where one of the three TSR3 founders, Stephen Dinehart announced - publicly! - that he had blocked WotC and Hasbro on Twitter. After everybody thought things couldn't get any more ridiculous, they did.

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As TSR2 rebranded to Solarian this week (after TSR3 sniped their name and trademark due to a missed filing), we've now gone from two TSRs to zero TSRs in the space of a few days.

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Most people assume that WotC (or Hasbro) has been in contact with TSR3 regarding its use of copyrighted imagery.

Meanwhile, search teams have been sent out for Michael, the mysterious PR officer announced last week who made two posts and then was never heard from again. In the meantime, somebody has set up a parody Twitter account for him.
 

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Lol. Fast Forward Entertainment was THE worst 3e company. They were one of, if not the only, publisher forced to destroy product because they couldn't follow the OGL. They also thought that they had unfettered permission to use th e moniker Drawmij because...reasons?
Weren't they the ones who put out a book of magic rings, and the entire thing was sort of an ad to go to their website and actually buy the ring to use as a prop.
 



Fast Forward Entertainment was the first time we realized just because old TSR developers worked on a product didn't make it gold. My brother has a few of their first books, he stopped buying them after that.

As far as Wonderfilled, they did at least release an original product, albeit one that's not so great. Judge's Guild, before the whole realization that they were antisemitic homophobic transphobic jerks, had done nothing but re-release old product reprints. All the talent left long ago, and now even the brand is worthless.
 



jdrakeh

Front Range Warlock
I wonder if they're trying to stretch Ward's co-authoring of the Deities & Demigods into co-creation of D&D.

Yes. Specifically that, but all of his other contributions as well. But by that logic, all prolific contributors would be co-creators of D&D. Which, of course, they are not. There is a difference between contributors and creators.
 

Cadence

Legend
Supporter
Yes. Specifically that, but all of his other contributions as well. But by that logic, all prolific contributors would be co-creators of D&D. Which, of course, they are not. There is a difference between contributors and creators.
"Legendary OD&D and 1e Author!"
"Creator of the first Sci-fi RPG!"

both seem like they would have been pretty good too, right?
 

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