Project Guidelines July 16th, 2023 Guiding Principles and Submission Guidelines

Tl;dr: If you think an RPG should be in our project, go ahead and either file an Issue, or make a Discussions post. It is recommended that you continue reading, so that you can avoid wasting your time and ours. Doing so will also help you be able to discern good open/libre RPGs from ones that in actuality are not free or open at all.

Don’t forget to check the list of RPGs itself, in case the game or system is already on it. RPGs that Fit Our Criteria

As a kind of quickstart, any RPG that’s published under one of our approved licenses is most likely to be accepted. On the other hand, any game or system published under any variant of the Open Game License will be rejected. The OGL, regardless of version, has never been a real open license. You can post a game that’s under a license that’s not on our list, but it will have to be assessed on a case by case basis. Guiding Principles

There are existing organizations who have held definitions for what is “free” or “open”. In the software world, the first and most well known is the Free Software Foundation, and their Four Freedoms. For general media, there’s the Free Culture definition. The one we’re primarily going to draw from is the Open Knowledge Foundation’s definition, since it has all the same principles as the other two, and is more comprehensive. Use

The license must allow free use of the licensed work. Redistribution

The license must allow redistribution of the licensed work, including sale, whether on its own or as part of a collection made from works from different sources. Modification

The license must allow the creation of derivatives of the licensed work and allow the distribution of such derivatives under the same terms of the original licensed work. Separation

The license must allow any part of the work to be freely used, distributed, or modified separately from any other part of the work or from any collection of works in which it was originally distributed. All parties who receive any distribution of any part of a work within the terms of the original license should have the same rights as those that are granted in conjunction with the original work. Compilation

The license must allow the licensed work to be distributed along with other distinct works without placing restrictions on these other works. Non-discrimination

The license must not discriminate against any person or group. Propagation

The rights attached to the work must apply to all to whom it is redistributed without the need to agree to any additional legal terms. Application to Any Purpose

The license must allow use, redistribution, modification, and compilation for any purpose. The license must not restrict anyone from making use of the work in a specific field of endeavor. No Charge

The license must not impose any fee arrangement, royalty, or other compensation or monetary remuneration as part of its conditions. (A note about that last principle – it does not mean you’re not allowed to sell an open work. If you publish a book under the CC BY license for example, you can sell it. What it means is that once the sale is made or the work is otherwise conveyed to a user, that user must be allowed all of the aforementioned rights without incurring additional charges).

In addition to these open definition principles, we’re adding additional requirements in light of the OGL 1.1 controversy as a safeguard. Professional Licenses Only

The license must be written by an experienced professional in the field of intellectual property law, and maintained by such persons. Rights Protecting Institutions

Only The license must be authored and maintained by a third party organization who 1. is not in a conflict of interest with a given work published. 2. has it as their stated mission to protect and preserve these same rights.

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Librerpg

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LibreRPG

is a space to talk about role-playing games, namely the tabletop kind (ttrpgs), that respect a users rights to use, copy, modify, share, distribute, and even financially prosper from them.

Posts about making or modding rpgs are encouraged too. One of the benefits of free culture is that fans are not merely passive consumers, but can be potential collaborators as well.

Rules

  1. Be kind. There is a person at each of our devices. Let’s be good to each other. No name-calling, yes compliments. No bigotry, yes building each other up. If you have to make a criticism, have something nice to say too.

  2. No piracy. This is a community for libre and open rpgs. Piracy shouldn’t be necessary in the first place. Let’s give more of our time and reciprocity to creators who contribute their works to the global commons.

  3. For games and systems, keep it to libre games only. Sometimes it’s not easy to assess the Copyright status of a work. Try to only make posts about games or systems that you have reason to believe fits the community definition of openness and freedom.

  4. Self Promotion is fine for now, as long as it’s libre. This may change in the future. For now, if a core part of your work (like an SRD for instance) is released under one of our approved licenses: please by all means self promote. :)

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