D&D's new Open Gaming License

Antimatter

Administrator
Staff member
Messages
1,761
Turns out, actions have consequences. But these consequences affect normal people working in the company that made bad decisions.


1100 (!) people laid off. More than the number from Epic Games earlier this year (900).

 

Zaxares

Habitué
Messages
77
Almost certainly the former, yeah. And it's a decision that will almost certainly come back to bite them in the rear. D&D is on a high right now given the positive reception it's had in things like Honor Among Thieves and (much more broadly) in BG3, but Hasbro looks to be canning a lot of the team who actually KNOWS what they're doing. It's a bit like firing all the knowledge experts in your business who actually make the products you sell because "grunt level workers shouldn't be paid that much".
 

Cahir

Innkeeper
Staff member
Messages
469
I wonder how it will impact Larian plans. I guess, it depends if their initial contract with WoTC was to make just BG3 or more games in FR setting. Getting to terms with new guys from WoTC may be something Swen won't have the will to do, especially if someone decides that it would be a bright idea to stick their nose into Larian's creative design process.
 

OrlonKronsteen

Habitué
Messages
322
There are hints of new games, as @Antimatter has alluded to, so one assumes there would have been a provisional contract of some sort.
Getting to terms with new guys from WoTC may be something Swen won't have the will to do, especially if someone decides that it would be a bright idea to stick their nose into Larian's creative design process.
That would truly be a disaster. Let’s hope Hasbro/WoTC are at least smart enough to understand that. Larian is the goose that laid the golden egg here.
 

JustKneller

Habitué
Messages
875
WotC's actions are obviously on the radar of the ttrpg community, too. Strangely enough, there's a bunch of old school gamers that are actually rooting for WotC in a lawsuit against a copyright infringer (who is basically a tax dodging transphobic neo-nazi that harasses old school gamers, no exaggeration), even though nobody in that community really likes their products. However, for old school gamers, WotC is somewhat moot. All of the old editions are complete and playable in their own right, no further products are needed, and as WotC gets blander and blander, classic tabletop (D&D) has no trouble retaining its character. D&D is just a sticker WotC puts on crappy books and accessories.

I think video games are definitely going to have a bigger problem with AI. Anyone can grab an old tabletop ruleset and cobble something together to play with friends, but coding a video game is a much more laborious endeavor. You're pretty much stuck with whatever the "industry standard" is.
 
Top Bottom