• [PC Gamer] DnD's new rules will be available under a Creative Commons licence

    From Kyonshi@gmkeros@gmail.com to rec.games.frp.dnd on Wed May 8 11:22:09 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.frp.dnd

    Source: https://www.pcgamer.com/games/rpg/dandds-new-rules-will-be-available-under-a-creative-commons-licence/

    D&D's new rules will be available under a Creative Commons licence
    By Jody Macgregor

    Last year the Dungeons & Dragons community imploded over a leaked draft
    of a licence change that suggested Wizards of the Coast was planning to restrict how the D&D rules could be used by anyone publishing
    third-party supplements, or separate games derived from D&D's 5th
    edition ruleset. At the peak of the outrage, Wizards of the Coast fully retreated from the proposed changes, and promised to make the base rules available under a Creative Commons licence.

    In January, Wizards lived up to that by putting version 5.1 of the
    Systems Reference Document into the Creative Commons. However, since
    revised versions of all three core rulebooks are on their way, with the Player's Handbook due in September, the Dungeon Master's Guide in
    November, and the Monster Manual in February of next year, the question remained: what would happen with future updates to the rules?

    Wizards has now announced that "within weeks" of the revised Monster
    Manual's publication, the SRD will be updated to version 5.2 and also
    released under a Creative Commons licence. "ItrCOs a massive update!" the
    FAQ promises. "SRD 5.2 will provide revised rules at the same scope as
    5.1. Creators will have the tools they need to create content using the revised and expanded ruleset. It will not, however, include lore
    references."

    So don't expect trademarked monsters like illithids or beholders to
    suddenly appear in the Creative Commons, but do expect a bunch of new
    rules additions to D&D's fifth edition (weapon properties, maybe?) to
    make the leap.

    Calling it a "massive update" is promising, but Wizards has been stingy
    with the SRD before. Version 5.1 only includes one feat, for instance,
    the not exactly world-shattering Grappler, and only one subclass for
    each class. That's why a game like Solasta: Crown of the Magister has to invent new feats and subclasses so you're not stuck playing the boring
    old fighter subclass of champion, which is the only one currently in the
    SRD. Fingers crossed version 5.2 is more generous with the revised
    rules' additions.
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  • From lkh@lkh@sdf-eu.org to rec.games.frp.dnd on Sun May 12 07:34:55 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.frp.dnd

    Kyonshi <gmkeros@gmail.com> wrote:
    Source: https://www.pcgamer.com/games/rpg/dandds-new-rules-will-be-available-under-a-creative-commons-licence/

    D&D's new rules will be available under a Creative Commons licence

    I think that's a pretty smart move, as it manifests 5e as a general
    standard.

    As recently witnessed by the prerelease of Kobolds Black Flag thing ...

    Maybe I've got to get used to 5e after all ... ;-)

    ~lkh
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  • From David Chmelik@dchmelik@gmail.com to rec.games.frp.dnd on Mon May 13 03:17:52 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.frp.dnd

    On Wed, 8 May 2024 11:22:09 +0200, Kyonshi wrote:

    Source:
    https://www.pcgamer.com/games/rpg/dandds-new-rules-will-be-available-
    under-a-creative-commons-licence/

    D&D's new rules will be available under a Creative Commons licence By
    Jody Macgregor

    I'm more interested in the old rules being Creative Commons (all versions
    of older standard Dungeons & Dragons through Advanced Dungeons & Dragons second edition... the so-called third (original 1981 was third) & '3.5' editions would be nice too).
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