If you know any of my writing [[link]] on this site, you know I've been just a wee bit critical of Dungeons & Dragons—while I did like the 2024 ruleset overall, I have that have more to do with —and the idea of D&D as a whole stagnating. The and the .
Still, there's a glimmer of hope among the unpleasantness. In a , the new head of D&D Dan Ayoub seems to be saying all the right words.
If I were to take a fully optimistic view on this—especially based on the tone of the rest of this update—that'd mean that the SRD will be updated with mechanics from new rulebooks. Which is important, given the SRD determines what third-party creators can and can't reference in the sale of the work. To dip my toe into the corpo-speak for a moment: A more robust SRD means more for D&D's third-party ecosystem to latch onto.
"Starting September 16, in time with the release of Heroes of the Borderlands, all D&D Beyond registered users can run games on the Maps virtual tabletop (VTT) —no subscription required.
The real question is whether D&D Beyond [[link]] can actually compete with those options, which will take some work, for sure—still, a lotta people use D&D Beyond and don't want to wrangle with sheet importers. Dare I say it, this actually seems like the smart play? Somebody pinch me.
It feels a little bittersweet, though, given Todd Kenreck, a mainstay social media manager and interviewer who worked for WoTC, . It feels like he should've probably been kept around for this bold new direction—but, hey, otherwise? I'm just barely cautiously optimistic for the system's future, but that's a marked improvement.