💾 Archived View for ttrpgs.com › gen › ogl.gmi captured on 2022-04-28 at 19:27:33. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
The Open Gaming Licence (OGL) does not in fact produce terribly open games.
The open gaming licence cannot cover a real RPG book. In fact, the licence specifically prohibits licensing a complete work, as it cannot cover "stories", "characters", "art", and all the other things which make up real RPG books.
While someone could theoretically lay down a book of bare rules on a table and start gaming, I have never seen it done. People want real RPG books, with art, examples, flavour-text, and example characters.
Publishing companies use the OGL to allow others to create splat-books, adventure modules and such, which popularize their own games.
The OGL's various stipulations about what it covers, what it does not, and how to express appropriate copyright claims in one's books cause persistent confusion whenever someone brings it up in an RPG chatroom. If people cannot clearly understand the document, then they shouldn't use it.
The complexity cannot stop here, because everything not covered by the OGL must have some other licence. This means that anyone who wants to make a truly open book, starting with the OGL as a base work, would have to ensure their work somehow stipulated that a paragraph covering the fighter class was licensed under the OGL, that the next paragraph (with an example story) was licensed under CC-4, and so on.
The OGL demands that RPG books use patchwork licences.
Within the UK, game mechanics don't get much copyright coverage. Every bit of US legislation I read suggests they cover even less. So if the law offers little to no protection for game mechanics, and the OGL only covers game mechanics, I don't see what use it serves.
Despite the limited laws Wizards of the Coast have attempted, unsuccessfully, to sue Frylock for printing basic stat-blocks of monsters. They did not make their overall argument clear when sending their initial threatening letter. The community only knows that using some stat-blocks wrong might land them in legal hot water.
Despite the idea that people could copy the basic D&D System Reference Document for use under the OGL, Wizards of the Coast provided a pdf, rather than a plain-text document, which people could actually draw upon. Of course, they never intended people to change the document. They called is a "system *reference* document", not a 'forkable document'.
Anyone wanting to actually use the document would have to wrestle it into a useable format on their own.
For BIND, I went with the GPL licence.