As Matt Forbeck pointed out on Twitter, WotC has owned D&D for 24 years since it purchased TSR in 1997. TSR created D&D in 1974, 23 years before WotC bought it.
STOP BEING YOUNG
Several of my gaming friends even say they couldn't ever play 1E again because of the limitations in character customization.
Interesting. Do we have an ETA for those?Two of those Hasbro licensed to Renegade Games. They're working on Transformers RPG using a 5e framework and GI Joe (which is essentially super&modern mashup).
Renegade has a solid 5e setting called Wardlings already if you want to see their work. It's the same designer, who joined RG full time due to the licensed games.
Interesting. Do we have an ETA for those?
The next franchise to be explored by Renegade Game Studios will be G.I. Joe. The franchise began simply as a line of toys designed by Hasbro that, due to the popularity of the toys, evolved further and further into other forms of entertainment. It has not been confirmed yet whether the G.I. Joe production will be a tabletop RPG or deck-building card game; however, it’s not difficult to speculate the possibilities that could come from the studio. With a movie in production revolving around G.I. Joe's Snake Eyes, the game’s timing could sync up with the release of the movie.
The Transformers franchise will also be explored, but Renegade Game Studios is still remaining rather vague on the products of this expansion. Transformers is yet another franchise that began as a set of toys and spiraled into the massive multi-media franchise it is today. The Autobots and Decepticons haven’t seen much in the way of tabletop roleplaying games (not officially licensed ones, at least), but they aren’t strangers to the world of board games and could branch into new territory.
I would like a D20 modern or a D20 Urban Arcana
Amazing Adventures is another take on the idea:Check out Ultramodern: Ultramodern5 (5th Edition) - Dias Ex Machina Games | DriveThruRPG.com
Yeah, video games that seemed unfathomably ancient in, say, 1990, like Pong (1972) are less old than games I remember as "modern" now (like Hostile Waters: Anataeus Rising (2001)). Similar things happened with late '80s movies that I saw in the early 1990s. I mean, hell, Fellowship of the Ring is 2001, so 20 years old. When I was say 13, that would be like a movie from 1971.
Exhibit A: 50 Shades of GreySigh.
It's always weird to me how folks like to push the idea that something popular and enjoyed by many folks, just simply can't be quality, all those sheep are missing out on what us few elite know to be real quality . . . .