A leaked version of Dungeons & Dragons new Open Game License has many worried about the future of the tabletop roleplaying game’s ecosystem. For weeks, rumors have swirled about Wizards of the Coast’s ...
Wizards of the Coast is serious about dealing with other companies that are essentially competing with them with their own product. Wizards of the Coast has canceled their plans to announce Dungeons & ...
Understanding the nuances of the OGL is complicated, but the impact that the current OGL has on the overall D&D ecosystem is actually very easy to see. If you’ve ever backed a Kickstarter for a 5E ...
Update: In response to the uncertainty surrounding the future of D&D’s licensing, Kobold Press, one of the largest publishers of content under OGL, released a statement on their website announcing ...
A copy of the new OGL for Dungeons and Dragons reportedly leaked online, and the contents have third-party creators concerned. The updated legal document is about 10 times longer than the original and ...
A new draft of the Dungeons & Dragons Open Gaming License, dubbed OGL 1.2 by publisher Wizards of the Coast, is now available for download. The announcement was made Thursday by Kyle Brink, executive ...
After more than a week of controversy, Dungeons & Dragons maker Wizards of the Coast says it’s backing off plans to alter its Open Gaming License in a way that incensed fans and led to some calling ...
On the heels of an unprecedented leak, Wizards of the Coast has backpedaled on its extremely unpopular plan to revise the Dungeons & Dragons Open Gaming License (OGL). Now, the world’s most popular ...
D&D historian Ben Riggs examines what happened when the game's publisher tried to change its open gaming license. Reading time 4 minutes Ben Riggs is a D&D historian and author of the book Slaying the ...