We All Won – The OGL Three Years Later


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I’ve made my opinions on the state of things pretty clear. We’re living in a great time. The latest update for 5e is the best it’s ever been and ticks a lot of boxes I wanted to see resolved from 2014. That’s surrounded by more 3pp products than ever before, some of the highest quality I’ve seen. Digital tools are pretty darn great and have increased accessibility and reduced cost. In short. These are the good days.

 
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Ultimately my group and I stopped playing 5e because we don't like the power gaming vibe or the softer tone of the game. If WotC was making something we liked, I'd buy it and play it without hesitation. But we all need to be clear-eyed: WotC/Hasboro is a big corporation that will do what big corporations do: anything to make money. Personally I'd rather support smaller companies--SlyFlourish, Goodman Games, Troll Lords, etc.--than a giant corporation that has been a very bad actor in the not too distant past.
 

Even more so, thanks to the Commons, D&D isn't really dependent on WotC.
This isn't really true "D&D" is a brand and only WotC can control what it looks like going forward. This is why it is important for folks to both vote with their wallets and let WotCknow what they like and don't.

Admittedly, this is harder when WotC won't put out books...
 

For the record, I was fairly certain Pathfinder was #2. Anecdotally, it's the game I see played more often after D&D. For a number of years it's also taken up an impressive amount of shelf space compared to most other games.

In many ways I think we all lost. I think it's unhealthy for so many companies to be dependent on WotC.
The whole point of putting the SRD into the Creative Commons was to free the rules from WotC's control. No 3pp needs them anymore. But a good many have chosen to attach themselves to them.

The real problem IMO is WotC's enormous weight in the industry and the community.
 

Even more so, thanks to the Commons, D&D isn't really dependent on WotC. My table can play it from now until we don't, no matter what WotC does.

Using the full ecosystem if Hasbro/WotC go under or get bought by a vile party I will still get fresh content from publishers who have robust support for the system.

Add those systems you've mentioned plus so many more, the Golden Age of RPGs is here
To be fair, your tables's ability to play D&D has never been dependent on WotC.
 

The whole point of putting the SRD into the Creative Commons was to free the rules from WotC's control.
That was the whole point of the OGL, too. As Ryan Dancey famously said in 2010, "I also had the goal that the release of the SRD would ensure that D&D in a format that I felt was true to its legacy could never be removed from the market by capricious decisions by its owners."

 


This isn't really true "D&D" is a brand and only WotC can control what it looks like going forward. This is why it is important for folks to both vote with their wallets and let WotCknow what they like and don't.

Admittedly, this is harder when WotC won't put out books...
If theoretically the entire ENWorld community stopped buying WotC products and let them know we didn't like their stuff, I severely doubt WotC would care. At all. I don't think the same is true of any other publisher.

This is what I was saying. WotC is simply far too influential compared to the rest of RPG-dom.
 

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