[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Thought about it. Doesn't work, chief, at least not for the intended purpose of mandating that everybody use new rules and regulations in OGL 2.0. Your method only works for d20 licensed products.

Actually, if the hypothetical OGL 2.0 mandated that any derivitive work use a version of OGL 2 or higher, you'd find a slow shift away from OGL 1.


No new type of content is required. Just a substantial body of work that does not allow OGL 1 to be used.

The OGL is resistant by design to this type of change, but it's not impossible. Especially if OGL 2 has sufficient value, in new terms or new IP, to make it worthwhile to the publishers.


DM


P.S. Of course, considering how much ample time WotC has for legal issues, we probably won't see even a consideration of this type of work until D&D 4--or 5, even.

_______________________________________________
Ogf-l mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://mail.opengamingfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/ogf-l

Reply via email to