Well, the release of Tasha’s
Cauldron of Everything reinforced my long held belief that player
accessories outsell DM accessories by a factor of, oh about 10 to one or
so. Case in point, we blew through our
order of 25 copies of Tasha’s Cauldron in about 2 days and have yet to sell one
of the Wilderness DM Screens.. Wizards, more player sourcebooks, fewer $50 campaigns.
The lawsuit filed by Gale Force 9 against WOTC is the second
high profile lawsuit filed against Wizards in the past few months. https://icv2.com/articles/news/view/47010/gale-force-nine-sues-wizards-coast The first, a lawsuit by Margaret Weis and
Tracy Hickman, was filed last October and alleges that, after entering into an
agreement to publish a new series of Dragonlance
novels with Weis and Hickman in 2017, WOTC notified the authors that it would
no longer approve any future drafts, effectively killing the project. You can
read the Weis and Hickman lawsuit here https://www.scribd.com/document/480740675/Margaret-Weis-LLC-and-Tracy-Hickman-v-Wizards-of-The-Coast-LLC?campaign=SkimbitLtd&ad_group=66960X1516586X335a223495fd2afffb96e5e4c7f7c54f&keyword=660149026&source=hp_affiliate&medium=affiliate#from_embed&referrer=polygon.com&sref=https://www.polygon.com/2020/10/19/21523673/dragonlance-authors-weis-hickman-sue-wizards-of-the-coast-dungeons-and-dragons&xcust=___pl__e_21287714__r_jenniferrpovey.medium.com/so-
Both lawsuits come on the heels of moves by Wizards to ban
controversial Magic cards https://icv2.com/articles/news/view/45914/rolling-for-initiative-another-week-turmoil-discuss and to eliminate the concept of inherently
evil races as well as cultural
stereotyping (see Vishanti for example) from Dungeons and Dragons materials https://dnd.wizards.com/articles/features/diversity-and-dnd
and one could be excused for thinking that the decision not to publish the
contracted Dragonlance novels could have something to do with Wizards desire to
eliminate the concept of inherently evil races from its published materials.
After all, the concepts of good, evil and neutrality are core concepts in the Dragonlance mythos and draconians have
been presented in the series from the start as an inherently evil race,
something that Wizards is disavowing and actively working to distance itself
from. Speaking as a non-lawyer with no
inside information about the situation, since the first novel was completed
before Wizards’ change in view of evil races, it is reasonable to assume that
the ethical views found throughout the previous Dragonlance novels would appear in the new ones, leaving Wizards
with a few choices, kill the project completely, publish the first novel as
presented under contract and risk backlash or go back to Weis and Hickman and
ask for a rewrite of the approved first novel to bring it into line with
current Wizards/D&D standards none of which are a particularly
cost0-effective option. My bet is this drags out for a few years, like the long
gestating D&D movie, and then the parties quietly settle https://icv2.com/articles/news/view/32214/d-d-movie-set-move-ahead
The Gale Force 9 situation has more direct impact on the
game industry, especially game retailers. While the Weiss Hickman lawsuit
deprives stores of an additional property to sell, the Gale Force 9 suit
threatens to put an end to the sales of their more profitable ancillary product
lines, the D&D 5th edition spell cards. These, and the D&D/Pathfinder miniatures
from WizKids are our best-selling non Wizards Dungeons and Dragons
products. As noted above, I am not a
lawyer but from my reading of the complaint, it appears that WOTC has seized
upon something that could easily be rectified by GF9 and is using it as a
justification for getting out of the contract. Why? Maybe 6th
Edition on the horizon and Wizards is cleaning up its licenses? Your thoughts
on either lawsuit? Email castleperilousgames@gmail.com.
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