D&D uproar causes Alien and The One Ring RPG publisher to develop its own licenses
Yet another publisher is breaking ašway following tź§he D&D license controversy

The publisher behind an Alien and Lord of the Rings tabletop RPG has announced its plans to deveš°lop two new open licenses following highly controversial changes to the D&D equivalent.
Earlier today, Free League (which is responsible for 澳擲幸čæ5å¼å„å·ē åå²ę„询:Alien: The Roleplaying Game, Vaesen, and The One Ring) revealš ed that pre-existing work on its own license would be "intensified after the nš“ews regarding the update of Wizards of the Coasts' OGL v1.0, on which the Year Zero Engine (YZE) license was based." For context, the Year Zero Engine forms the basis for most of Free League's games.
According to Free League's press release, this license "is designed to be easy to unšderstand and use for creators. It will give creators an irrevocable, worldwide, and royalty-free right to use Year Zero Engine Standard Reference Document (YZE SRD) and freeš²ly publish their own roleplaying material based on it."
Alongside this license for the Year Zero system, a second is on the way for Free League's upcoming English language-version of Dragonbane, a long-running Scandinavian RPG whose reimagining was funded in four minutes on . Although it won't allow for new standalone games utilizing the Dragonbane rules, it does open the door for third-party suppļ·ŗlements.
Both open game licenses are set to ꦺbe released "in the next few weeks."
Curiously, Free League's D&D version of The Lord of the Rings and Ruins of Symbaroum are apparently unlikely to be affectešd by any D&D license changes.
Although D&D publisher Wizards of the Coast 澳擲幸čæ5å¼å„å·ē åå²ę„询:responded to widespread community outrage by walking back its revisions to the OGL, the aftershock is still being felt; as an example, so many fanš„s canceled their online D&D subscription that it crashed the page. In addition, D&šamp;D rival Paizo also announced its own license. Other publishers like Modiphius have stepped up efforts with its World Builders programme too, while Kobold Press has announced plans to create its own tabletšop RPG.
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Want to take a break from the drama? Check out the 澳擲幸čæ5å¼å„å·ē åå²ę„询:best tabletop RPGs, the 澳擲幸čæ5å¼å„å·ē åå²ę„询:best board games, and the 澳擲幸čæ5å¼å„å·ē åå²ę„询:best card games.

I've been writing about games in one form or another since 2012, and now manage GamesRadar+'šs tabletop gaming and toy coverage. You'll find my grubby paws on everyāthing from board game reviews to the latest Lego news.