The lawsuit says WOTC said we aren't going to approve any more drafts of the book but at the same time there is no breach of contract, so lul you get nothing for all the work you did.
If true, effectively screwing over my childhood D&D Dragonlance authors by a huge corporation is absolutely despicable.
The lawsuit says WOTC said we aren't going to approve any more drafts of the book but at the same time there is no breach of contract, so lul you get nothing for all the work you did.
If true, effectively screwing over my childhood D&D Dragonlance authors by a huge corporation is absolutely despicable.
No they got an advance. So they go paid for some of the work. The devil in the details is, do they get another advance if Wotc decides not to give the green light to their work.
The lawsuit says WOTC said we aren't going to approve any more drafts of the book but at the same time there is no breach of contract, so lul you get nothing for all the work you did.
If true, effectively screwing over my childhood D&D Dragonlance authors by a huge corporation is absolutely despicable.
No they got an advance. So they go paid for some of the work. The devil in the details is, do they get another advance if Wotc decides not to give the green light to their work.
If they want to breach the contract, then do so and pay what ever is needed to end the contract. But to pull everyone together and say "he we aren't breaking the contract, but we aren't moving forward either" seems rather suspicious.
Dragon Talk: Margaret Weis - 3/10/2019
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fxa5JjZyJKM
Surprisingly comments are turned off. I guess the fans of Dragon Lance got a lil spicy with WotC cancelling a new campaign that people wanted.
I'm not spicy about the cancellation of the new books, it is how they did it (allegedly).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uCyIamwg6tg
The lawsuit says WOTC said we aren't going to approve any more drafts of the book but at the same time there is no breach of contract, so lul you get nothing for all the work you did.
If true, effectively screwing over my childhood D&D Dragonlance authors by a huge corporation is absolutely despicable.
No they got an advance. So they go paid for some of the work. The devil in the details is, do they get another advance if Wotc decides not to give the green light to their work.
No Gaming is Better than Bad Gaming.
If they want to breach the contract, then do so and pay what ever is needed to end the contract. But to pull everyone together and say "he we aren't breaking the contract, but we aren't moving forward either" seems rather suspicious.
Thanks for the link!