It's certainly not the best game out there, but I'd argue that it's mostly name recognition. Which Mercer himself is at least in part responsible for.I'm not sure I agree with the claim, but I really hope Mercer believes it.
I'm thinking a backdoor contract between them.My guess is that it's just risk mitigation. They're more confident they'd be able to collect their share from products released through Kickstarter. But I'm just speculating.
I don't think it's "backdoor" -- I think Hasbro is making all the big guys offers they can't refuse. But Mercer liking that tweet at least suggests, even if it's some wishcasting on my part, that he might be inclined to refuse anyway.I'm thinking a backdoor contract between them.
I unfortunately don't believe that. The OGL was a tactical error that allowed Paizo to grow and flourish using familiar D&D IP. D&D now doesn't need the OGL and all the D20 come along games and third party stuff to be successful. I don't think D&D 5th edition took off because of the OGL.
Which tweet? EDIT: NM saw it, fast threads.I don't think it's "backdoor" -- I think Hasbro is making all the big guys offers they can't refuse. But Mercer liking that tweet at least suggests, even if it's some wishcasting on my part, that he might be inclined to refuse anyway.
Dice!LOL.
WotC can eat a bag of ________.
There wasn't even an SRD when it took off.I don't think D&D 5th edition took off because of the OGL.
no, it cannot. Worst case (which also us where this is headed) you cannot publish anything new under 1.0
That status change... new?I've posted an article summarsing the current situation as best I can at present:
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The OGL -- Just What's Going On?
D&D fandom is in uproar again about purported upcoming changes to the Open Gaming License, and rumours are flooding social media regarding WotC's intentions to 'de-authorize' the existing Open Gaming License in favour of a new one. What's the OGL? The Open Gaming License is a share-a-like...www.enworld.org
WotC's lawyersBut again, what could compel that? If I don't agree to v1.1 — if I just act like v1.1 doesn't exist and go about my merry way publishing under v1.0 — what could stop me?
Yeah, makes any help you give them feel a lot like being the accomplice in what could be the ruining of many, many lives.Does this make anyone else not want to participate in the playtest?
Does this make anyone else not want to participate in the playtest?
I recorded a podcast episode where I played the playtest with a few friends. Even if the episode gets published, only a small portion of it will be on the playtest itself and most of it will be on the OGL.Does this make anyone else not want to participate in the playtest?
It wasn't a play test to begin with, but it makes me want to participate in the surveys even more.Does this make anyone else not want to participate in the playtest?
Yeah. Casting doubt on the perpetual viability of the OGL v1.0a that was heretofore unquestioned is already a degree of damage that won't be easily undone.Even if WotC were to come out and say "we reconsidered", it feels like unless there's a court decision saying it's irrevocable or a 1.0b* that's just like 1.0a except with irrevocable, that it would be silly for anyone not to think this 1.1 wasn't right around the next management-change corner?
*Not that the new things coming up from WotC have to be under it, just that all the old stuff doesn't go away.
I unfortunately don't believe that. The OGL was a tactical error that allowed Paizo to grow and flourish using familiar D&D IP. D&D now doesn't need the OGL and all the D20 come along games and third party stuff to be successful. I don't think D&D 5th edition took off because of the OGL.
Similarly Chaosium would be better off having published Delta Green as a branch of Call of Cthulhu, and not allowed it to go off and make someone else successful while being hard to distinguish system and background wise from CoC.