Can I sell homebrew DnD?
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Can I sell homebrew DnD?
These adventures and games can’t be sold in the official digital storefront, but publishers are free to print and digitally publish their own works as long as they adhere to the license.
Is D&D copyrighted?
Copyright protects specific products in part or in full exactly as they are. Copying the D&D rules exactly as written in any of the published D&D material and displaying them in your game to read would be a copyright violation.
Can you make money off DMs Guild?
You’re paying Wizards of the Coast for the right to use their content, and it’s no trivial amount. If your content is something that could fall under the OGL, you’d be getting paid 70\% of your price on DriveThruRPG rather than 50\% on DMs Guild. 20\% is a LOT. WotC has gotten $1,600 in royalties from Gray Merchant.
How do I publish on DMsGuild?
Getting Published After you’ve reviewed the guidelines, all you need to do is write your content and then go to Account > My Content > Enter New Community Created Title to publish your first DMsGuild title!
Do I need to publish my homebrew on D&D Beyond?
When using the homebrew features on D&D Beyond, it is important to note that while you have access to the tools to create homebrew, you do not need to publish it. Publishing it means it will be shared with the entire site and used for public consumption.
Can I publish content compatible with DND 5e?
That’s why you see a lot of content that identifies itself as “compatible with 5e”, “fifth edition”, “DnD”, or even “for the world’s greatest role-playing game”. Unfortunately, you cannot publish your own content with some of the most memorable creatures in D&D.
Can you sell D&D content?
That means that you can sell a module where players traverse the Sword Coast on the hunt for beholders if (and only if) you sell it through the Dungeon Master’s Guild. You can call it D&D content, you can mention Wizards of the Coast, You can reference pages in the Monster Manual, you can do it all.
Who owns the copyright to D&D 5th?
Wizards of the Coast has written the rules and content for Dungeons and Dragons 5th, so they automatically own the copyright on all the content. They were cool enough to license a smaller set of that content (the SRD) under special terms (the OGL) so that you can use it.