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Open Source RPGs

Sneaky RPG creator often trick people into thinking their books are open source by just giving a book away for free, and slapping the word ā€˜openā€™ on it (or using the ā€˜openā€™ gaming licence). And apparently this simple illusion has bamboozled the majority of the RPG world.

As a result, searching for open source RPGs is nearly impossible, which means finding other open-source enthusiasts has been a chore rather than a joy. But after years of digging past false promises, Iā€™ve found a small handful of RPGs which really do have available source-files, which anyone can modify.

Chronicles

Chronicles[a] is a completely open source RPG, written in Markdown. The plain text base allows it to output to epub, pdf, and html.

[a]

Knave

Knave, like many other RPGs, uses a Creative Commons 4.0 licence. But unlike many others, it actually has a source file which comes with the pdf.

Unfortunately, the Creative Commons only require redistribution of the output files. This means that when someone created the Rascals[a] RPG, the resulting pdf fell under the same Creative Commons licence, but did not give anyone the legal right to also receive the source files. So if you want to modify the Rascals RPG, you will have to guess at every change made to the Knave source file, and then make those changes.

[a]

Cairn

Like Knave, Cairn[a] comes with source files when you buy it. Those source files are, unfortunately, Affinity Publisher files, however, this still counts.

[a]

Luckily, Cairnā€™s Github[a] page seems to have all of the basic source files required for a game.

[a]

Winterwold

Winterwold[a] and the related books are under CC-BY-SA, and come with their source files. The source files are all .docx, which isnā€™t great - but these are the source files, and you are allowed to change them.

[a]

Siren

Written in LaTeX, Siren[a] provides the classic open source experience. Unfortunately the writer abandoned the project four years ago.

[a]

BIND

And of course, my own. Check out BIND here[a].

[a]

Definitions

ā€˜Open Sourceā€™ refers to source files which remain open to change by anyone. They have no restrictions (except a few minor stipulations, which will not stop anyone from changing the source files, and printing off a new book).

Reasons for Disqualification

[a]

[b]

[a]

~~~~~~~~

So thatā€™s it. Iā€™ve found six open source RPGs in English.