Hello, I have typed up a homebrew I found online, and wished to publish it (with credit given to the creator of course), but it says that I can't do this because:
This homebrew Subclass has data mapped to it that is licensed content or private homebrew. This typically occurs when licensed or private homebrew spells are linked to the Subclass.
This homebrew Subclass does not have the necessary class features with the correct required levels.
I'm not sure I understand what this means, I haven't linked to any homebrew, and I'm not sure how it could be missing any class features.
What class, what levels and what official spells have you mapped to it?
You won’t be able to publish it anyway, since you didn’t write it, it will likely be kicked back. You should only ever attempt to publish homebrews you yourself have created.
What class, what levels and what official spells have you mapped to it?
You won’t be able to publish it anyway, since you didn’t write it, it will likely be kicked back. You should only ever attempt to publish homebrews you yourself have created.
Druid
2nd, 6th, 10th, 14th
Alarm, arcane lock, clairvoyance, meld into stone, fabricate, mordenkainen's private sanctum, animate objects, passwall, commune with nature, druid grove, locate animals or plants, transport via plants and tree stride.
If that's the case, then I'll just keep it private, I thought the only limit on publishing homebrew was that it didn't infringe copyright.
It's primarily because you have non-SRD spells mapped to the subclass (ie Mordenkainen's private sanctum). Though IamSposta is absolutely correct in that you should never submit homebrew that doesn't belong to you.
And because of a technical glitch, Druids require a 3rd level feature to publish on DDB even though they should not actually have 3rd level subclass features.
I just made a homebrew class and it wont let me publish because of the “This homebrew Subclass does not have the necessary class features with the correct required levels.” i spent 3 hours on it btw
Please see the General FAQ #Ω: (https://www.dndbeyond.com/forums/dungeons-dragons-discussion/homebrew-house-rules/131411-a-homebrewers-how-to-faq). Besides, it’s better to spend months on a homebrew prior to publishing, not hours. Once you publish you cannot edit your homebrew any further. The best you can do is republish, but the old version will still be out there forever for anyone to use. It is best practice to spend a few months playtesting and editing your homebrew prior to publishing it.
Hello, I have typed up a homebrew I found online, and wished to publish it (with credit given to the creator of course), but it says that I can't do this because:
I'm not sure I understand what this means, I haven't linked to any homebrew, and I'm not sure how it could be missing any class features.
https://www.dndbeyond.com/subclasses/547603-circle-of-the-village
What class, what levels and what official spells have you mapped to it?
You won’t be able to publish it anyway, since you didn’t write it, it will likely be kicked back. You should only ever attempt to publish homebrews you yourself have created.
Creating Epic Boons on DDB
DDB Buyers' Guide
Hardcovers, DDB & You
Content Troubleshooting
If that's the case, then I'll just keep it private, I thought the only limit on publishing homebrew was that it didn't infringe copyright.
It's primarily because you have non-SRD spells mapped to the subclass (ie Mordenkainen's private sanctum). Though IamSposta is absolutely correct in that you should never submit homebrew that doesn't belong to you.
And because of a technical glitch, Druids require a 3rd level feature to publish on DDB even though they should not actually have 3rd level subclass features.
Creating Epic Boons on DDB
DDB Buyers' Guide
Hardcovers, DDB & You
Content Troubleshooting
I just made a homebrew class and it wont let me publish because of the “This homebrew Subclass does not have the necessary class features with the correct required levels.” i spent 3 hours on it btw
https://www.dndbeyond.com/subclasses/1309684-college-of-atoms
Please see the General FAQ #Ω: (https://www.dndbeyond.com/forums/dungeons-dragons-discussion/homebrew-house-rules/131411-a-homebrewers-how-to-faq). Besides, it’s better to spend months on a homebrew prior to publishing, not hours. Once you publish you cannot edit your homebrew any further. The best you can do is republish, but the old version will still be out there forever for anyone to use. It is best practice to spend a few months playtesting and editing your homebrew prior to publishing it.
Creating Epic Boons on DDB
DDB Buyers' Guide
Hardcovers, DDB & You
Content Troubleshooting