Paizo: Difference between revisions

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(→‎ORC: PF2 is such a different beast that the inclusion of the OGL was for the 3rd partys' benifit.)
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==ORC==
==ORC==


In 2023 however, [[Avatar: The Last Airbender|everything changed when]] [[Wizards of the Coast|Wizards]] [[Avatar: The Last Airbender|attacked]]. Releasing the 1.1 edition of the [[Open Gaming License|OGL]] and attempting to destroy the 1.0 version, people thought this would be the end of Paizo, whose flagship titles originated from the system.
In 2023 however, [[Avatar: The Last Airbender|everything changed when]] [[Wizards of the Coast|Wizards]] [[Avatar: The Last Airbender|attacked]]. Releasing the <s>1.1</s> 2.0 edition of the [[Open Gaming License|OGL]] and attempting to destroy the 1.0 version, people thought this would be the end of Paizo, whose flagship titles originated from the system.


Think again. They only kept the OGL in PF2 books to extend the open license to PF 3rd party. Instead, they announced the creation of the Open RPG Creative License (shortened to [[Orc|ORC]]) with the help of several other publishers and lawyers who helped pen the original OGL. Under this they have chosen to make an open-source system-agnostic document for all tabletop games, in response to Wizards trying to do the opposite. And ORC is being specifically made with a clause that it ''can't'' be revoked later like Wizards is trying to do with OGL. Time will tell whether this will end favorably, though for now Paizo has stated they will fend for itself and other companies like [[Kobold Press]] and [[Chaosium]] in court if need be.
Think again. They only kept the OGL in PF2 books to extend the open license to PF 3rd party. Instead, they announced the creation of the Open RPG Creative License (shortened to [[Orc|ORC]]) with the help of several other publishers and lawyers who helped pen the original OGL. Under this they have chosen to make an open-source system-agnostic document for all tabletop games, in response to Wizards trying to do the opposite. And ORC is being specifically made with a clause that it ''can't'' be revoked later like Wizards is trying to do with OGL. Time will tell whether this will end favorably, though for now Paizo has stated they will fend for itself and other companies like [[Kobold Press]] and [[Chaosium]] in court if need be.


[[Category:Roleplaying]][[Category:Publishers]][[Category:Dungeons & Dragons]][[Category:Pathfinder]]
[[Category:Roleplaying]][[Category:Publishers]][[Category:Dungeons & Dragons]][[Category:Pathfinder]]

Revision as of 19:30, 13 January 2023

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Paizo Publishing is the company behind Pathfinder and Starfinder and the former publisher of Dragon and Dungeon magazines from 2002-2007. Back when Hasbro bought WotC, a whole bunch of people from the company jumped ship rather than see it get butchered from the inside. About a year after the purchase, Hasbro started slicing off or shutting down a bunch of stuff they got from buying Wizards. Paizo was started up so that the magazines wouldn't die, and took on all the magazine staff still working at Wizards.

Along with the D&D mags, Paizo also took over Star Wars Insider and Polyhedron from Wizards, and later tried starting a generalist gamer magazine Undefeated and a relaunch of Amazing Stories -- neither of which lasted more than about a year. SW Insider didn't last that long with Paizo either, moving to a different publisher due to politicking over the official Star Wars fan club.

When 4E was around the corner, Hasbro made Paizo give back the magazines, after which they were replaced with a digital app. With nothing better to do, Paizo decided they'd listen to all of us who knew that 4E would be shit, and started up Pathfinder; the rest is history.

In 2022, Paizo started releasing content for Dungeons & Dragons 5th edition starting with a conversion of one of their popular adventure paths, Kingmaker. Whether or not this is a sign that Pathfinder isn't doing well Paizo is currently cashing in on the anything-but-5e-core hunger in the 5e fanbase is currently unknown.

ORC

In 2023 however, everything changed when Wizards attacked. Releasing the 1.1 2.0 edition of the OGL and attempting to destroy the 1.0 version, people thought this would be the end of Paizo, whose flagship titles originated from the system.

Think again. They only kept the OGL in PF2 books to extend the open license to PF 3rd party. Instead, they announced the creation of the Open RPG Creative License (shortened to ORC) with the help of several other publishers and lawyers who helped pen the original OGL. Under this they have chosen to make an open-source system-agnostic document for all tabletop games, in response to Wizards trying to do the opposite. And ORC is being specifically made with a clause that it can't be revoked later like Wizards is trying to do with OGL. Time will tell whether this will end favorably, though for now Paizo has stated they will fend for itself and other companies like Kobold Press and Chaosium in court if need be.