Man in the Funny Hat
Hero
Saw those modules when they first came out. I didn't much care back then and never gave it much thought. But as time has passed I don't think it was EVER a good idea because it is anathema to the game. KoDT is funny because the concept of competitive RPG's is in and of itself funny.Grue said:Check out some of the old 1st ed competition module series. While by their nature competition modules are more goal oriented and geared for problem solving it can be a nice change of pace. And in KoDT fashion it can be fun to compete to see who has the 'best' group on the block.![]()
I don't know from LARPs and again, don't much care. The OP was phrased along the lines of "What if WotC did this for D&D?" and it's from that perspective that I'm answering.As for charging for LARPs, well the level of work a storyteller has to do to get a moderately sized one off the ground (and in good shape afterward for a 30 to 50 member troupe) is head and shoulders above any prep work I've ever had to do for any tabletop game. Even if you don't have to rent a place to hold the game, the cost in paper, ink, folders, name-tags, and other props make a small fee a reasonable requirement. Add in the hours of the not so fun work of writing up and updating character backgrounds, then figuring out story arcs and plots, setting character goals, clues, and rumors, and the actually running of the game (mass combats are always tricky) and I'd consider the part of the fee past cost I'd a small gratuity.
If LARPs have sustained up-front costs that a game of D&D doesn't, such that defraying those costs is much more important for all concerned it still seems to me that that is for the individual participants to work out - the company that makes the game they play hasn't got any moral, ethical, or probably even legal right to interfere with how they handle distributing those costs. Certainly not in any forum other than a COMPANY sponsored gathering. If a Convention wishes to formally organize LARPS using WW material I cannot fathom how WW can expect to coerce compliance to their organizations and policies because the purchase and use of those materials doesn't include any tacit or formal agreement to do so. WW simply doesn't get to tell players how, when, where, or why to run games - and it certainly doesn't get to extort a cut of the money just because money is changing hands.
If WotC were to try some kind of crap like this I would enthusiastically go out of my way to flaunt their policy as publicly as possible and take no prisoners.