Apple actually has always allowed other companies to create software and accessories for thier products.
The way it works for D&D is that anyone can use the OGL to create thier own content which then encourages more players to then purchase the PHB, DMG, MM and so forth. " A rising tide raises all boats" system.
It is ok to spend money on Beyond if it makes you and your friends happy.
As someone who was around in the scene before the OGL 1.0 was put in place and then witnessed the OGL Crisis, and have been semi familiar with the leadership off and on, my perspective is this. The new guy's credentials make me nervous, but I will give him a chance, the state of the OGL is pretty great now, but i have a lot of ill feelings about what it took to get there, and i have an ever growing animosity toward Hasbro, believer me i mean it when i say.
It is ok to spend money on Beyond if it makes you and your friends happy.
There is a lot of bad stuff happening in the world, so if this helps you deal with it, then go ahead. Yeah it sucks that you have to pay a sub, to use stuff you already paid for, that is the major weakness of Beyond. You also don't have to, since there are other sites like Roll20, That you can get access to the materials through as well, and Roll20 is a little more homebrew friendly. If you have the physical books, it will be time consuming, but you can type or transfer the text into Roll20 and make it work. (it is tetchy, but it works better than the homebrew stuff on beyond, and it comes free with the 2014 sheets, that can easily handle making 2024 characters with.)
talk to you players. If it is beyond or nothing, no shame in paying if you are happy, if they are willing to jump ship, experiment with other VTTs. Beyond isn't the only one.
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He/Him. Loooooooooong time Player. The Dark days of the THAC0 system are behind us.
"Hope is a fire that burns in us all If only an ember, awaiting your call To rise up in triumph should we all unite The spark for change is yours to ignite." Kalandra - The State of the World
Even if you have absolutely zero trust for "the new guy," guess what? D&D 5e's SRD is in Creative Commons now. You can play a theoretically infinite number of D&D campaigns and never have to send a dime to WotC - just stick with the SRD and third-party content and/or homebrew. When you're buying a new book from them, what you're paying for is convenience and
Personally speaking, I don't trust any corporation because "trust" is ultimately irrelevant to our transactional relationship. Their job is to create content I'm willing to pay for, at a price I'm willing to pay. That's the extent of what I need or expect them to do. Ayoub's promises to investors on Wall Street might mean more stuff I get to enjoy in the future, but until that stuff exists, it barely matters to me.
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Apple actually has always allowed other companies to create software and accessories for thier products.
The way it works for D&D is that anyone can use the OGL to create thier own content which then encourages more players to then purchase the PHB, DMG, MM and so forth. " A rising tide raises all boats" system.
It is ok to spend money on Beyond if it makes you and your friends happy.
As someone who was around in the scene before the OGL 1.0 was put in place and then witnessed the OGL Crisis, and have been semi familiar with the leadership off and on, my perspective is this.
The new guy's credentials make me nervous, but I will give him a chance, the state of the OGL is pretty great now, but i have a lot of ill feelings about what it took to get there, and i have an ever growing animosity toward Hasbro, believer me i mean it when i say.
It is ok to spend money on Beyond if it makes you and your friends happy.
There is a lot of bad stuff happening in the world, so if this helps you deal with it, then go ahead. Yeah it sucks that you have to pay a sub, to use stuff you already paid for, that is the major weakness of Beyond.
You also don't have to, since there are other sites like Roll20, That you can get access to the materials through as well, and Roll20 is a little more homebrew friendly. If you have the physical books, it will be time consuming, but you can type or transfer the text into Roll20 and make it work. (it is tetchy, but it works better than the homebrew stuff on beyond, and it comes free with the 2014 sheets, that can easily handle making 2024 characters with.)
talk to you players. If it is beyond or nothing, no shame in paying if you are happy, if they are willing to jump ship, experiment with other VTTs. Beyond isn't the only one.
He/Him. Loooooooooong time Player.
The Dark days of the THAC0 system are behind us.
"Hope is a fire that burns in us all If only an ember, awaiting your call
To rise up in triumph should we all unite
The spark for change is yours to ignite."
Kalandra - The State of the World
Even if you have absolutely zero trust for "the new guy," guess what? D&D 5e's SRD is in Creative Commons now. You can play a theoretically infinite number of D&D campaigns and never have to send a dime to WotC - just stick with the SRD and third-party content and/or homebrew. When you're buying a new book from them, what you're paying for is convenience and
Personally speaking, I don't trust any corporation because "trust" is ultimately irrelevant to our transactional relationship. Their job is to create content I'm willing to pay for, at a price I'm willing to pay. That's the extent of what I need or expect them to do. Ayoub's promises to investors on Wall Street might mean more stuff I get to enjoy in the future, but until that stuff exists, it barely matters to me.