
So here’s a tough one. Some kids posted a copy of the Dungeons and Dragons Player’s Handbook 2 on Scribd.com and it was viewed more than 4,000 times and potentially downloaded about 2,600 times. They also found that a nice Polish boy, Krysztof, who posted copies of some modules. The defendants are based in Florida, the Philipines, and Polska.
Here’s the rub: if I were WotC, I’d be happy someone was actually reading my books. Role playing is popular, obviously, but this would open up the pastime to millions of proto-nerds. Obviously the company needs the cash to stay alive but perhaps something a bit less drastic is in order? Maybe a “lite” version for the kids and an easy way to get the books in stores around the world?
Interestingly, 4,200 downloads is a pittance. Six million people around the world play D&D at present and 20 million have played it in the past. Clearly someone is buying the Monster Manual out there and the 20-sided-die industry isn’t failing. Why get litigious? What think you?









I am no fan of lawsuits and Wizards behavior towards electronic copies of their stuff is pretty dumb. They pulled all the legitimate ways you can buy their stuff on pdfs leaving only piracy. That said, they do indeed have a lite version they give away for free with a complete adventure to try it with. It can be found here: http://www.wizards.com/default.asp?x=dnd/4dnd/dndtestdrive
ouch i dident think you actualy got sewed for posting info like that on the web….. oh and the guys that got sewed did they get off or did they get jail time?