Wizards of the Coast fully retreats from D&D license changes after community outrage-

In a blog post published Friday, Wizards of the Coast announced that it is fully putting the kibosh on the proposed Open Gaming License (OGL) 1.2 that threw the tabletop RPG community into disarray at the beginning of this month.

Instead, Wizards will leave the previously enshrined OGL 1.0 in place, while also putting the latest D&D Systems Reference Document (SRD 5.1) under a Creative Commons License (thanks to GamesRadar for the spot).

The OGL controversy timeline in brief

  • The original OGL was put in place with the third edition of D&D in 2000, and allowed other companies and creators to base their work off D&D and the d20 system without payment to or oversight from Wizards.
  • A draft of a revised OGL 1.1 leaked early in January, which proposed royalty payments and creative control by Wizards over derivative works. This immediately incited a backlash from fans.
  • Wizards backpedaled, introducing a softer OGL 1.2 that would still replace the original, and opened the community survey cited in today’s announcement.

With 15,000 respondents in, the results of the survey were pretty damning. 88% didn’t “want to publish TTRPG content under OGL 1.2,” while 89% were “dissatisfied with deauthorizing OGL 1.0a.” 62% were happy that Wizards would put prior SRD versions under Creative Commons, with most of the dissenters wanting more Creative Commons-protected content.

In response, Wizards of the Coast caved. It’s leaving the OGL 1.0 in place, and will add the up-to-date SRD 5.1 to the list of prior D&D materials under Creative Commons, permanently allowing its free distribution and use.

“We don’t control that license and cannot alter or revoke it,” D&D executive producer Kyle Brink wrote in the blog post above. “Placing the SRD under a Creative Commons is a one-way door. There’s no going back.”

Wizards of the Coast has closed the OGL 1.2 survey, and while this marks a decisive victory for the community, there remain lingering questions and not a little bit of ill will towards Wizards for its initial push to change the OGL. PC Gamer Senior Editor Robin Valentine wonders if the OGL was even worth fighting for in the first place, arguing that this could be an opportunity for a fresh start in tabletop roleplay. “An entire hobby is shackled to a game full of rules and assumptions still deeply bound to decisions made 50 years ago,” Robin wrote. “Some of them simply clunky, others increasingly problematic. Is that a situation worth fighting to protect?”

There also remains the question of Paizo and its recently-announced Open RPG Creative License (ORC)—this “system-agnostic” rival license had support from over 1,500 TTRPG publishers as of last week, a mighty head of steam that Wizards may have been too slow to counteract. The OGL is here to stay, but have those smaller publishers and independent creators left for good?

Related Posts

Tropico 5 Review

Everything is just one big joke on the island of Tropico. Your research team is incompetent, your diplomat is a snob, and your radio DJ is absolutely shameless. But that’s OK, because both Tropico 5 and its digital inhabitants don’t take anything too seriously. This management sim wraps its irreverent wit around some easily approachable mechanics that smartly grow in complexity as you move through the ages and become more familiar with your new role as El Presidente.

I’m getting ahead of myself, since you’re not actually El Presidente in the beginning. Instead, Tropico 5 starts you off as a lowly governor in the Victorian era under the service of the Crown. From these humble beginnings, you must guide your people through World War II, the Cold War, and beyond. Each age brings with it a new set of challenges because your tiny island nation is sandwiched between the world’s rotating superpowers. But as your trusted advisors say, it is your will alone that is holding Tropico toge…

Halo Infinite's First In-Person Esports Tournament Teased For 2021

Halo’s long history with esports will continue with Halo Infinite, and now the game’s first tournament has been teased. The franchise’s competitive gaming lead, Tashi, announced on Twitter that Microsoft just recently finalized a date and venue for the first Halo Infinite event in the Halo Championship Series. Come from Sports betting site VPbet

Tashi didn’t share any further specifics, but more details will be announced this summer. Also, everything could change as a result of the pandemic, Tashi cautioned.

No Man's Sky Modder Keeps Adding Sean Murray's Face To The Game

Five years after it first launched, No Mans Sky has expanded its universe with a number of free expansions. The next DLC is titled Frontiers, and for one fan, it can’t come soon enough. There’s no concrete release date yet for Frontiers, and as a way to stave off boredom, video producer Winder Sun has begun modding Sean Murray’s face into the game.

It’s all in good fun though, as the No Man’s Sky director seems impressed with just how far Winder Sun is willing to take this experiment Come from Sports betting site VPbet . The first day began with Murray’s face being placed on an exocraft spaceship, day two saw his visage plastered over portals and warps to disturbing effect, and on day three you could spot Murray-faced blobs on several planets.

Even Winder Sun’s avatar in No Man’s Sky has had some digital surgery to resemble Murray, who this week has been seen exploring a planet where all the flora has evolved a natur…

Loki Season 2- Disney+ Show Finale Confirms Second Season Is Coming

Loki has become the first MCU Disney+ show to be confirmed for a second season. The time-traveling, reality-breaking trickster god’s solo series ended after six episodes with a brief post-credits teaser that simply stated Loki will return for Season 2.

Unfortunately, this split second confirmation included absolutely no other information. Details about the production schedule, cast, or potential release of the second season have not been made available. Next on the docket for the MCU on Disney+ is the animated show What If…? Which recently received a release date of August 11 as well as its first full-length trailer.

Other confirmed MCU release dates are Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, which hits theaters on September 3 and The Eternals, which will premiere on November 5. The Disney+ docket will likely include other shows, like Hawkeye, before the end of the year, but no dates have been set as of yet.