In April, Wizards of the Coast sued 8 alleged file sharers over copyright infringement for unauthorized sharing of the then newly introduced Dungeons & Dragons Player?s Handbook 2.
The lawsuits claimed the Handbook was illegally shared on file-sharing websites and the many downloads of the unauthorized copies led to lost sales and lost revenue for the company.
This week, two of the ... [ read the full article ]
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Now that is just an a-hole thing to do. Pirating Hollywood movies is one thing, but with the countless hours of imaginative enjoyment that can be had for a mere $40, pirating a D&D book is a new low. I say shame on all those involved. Shame, Shame, Shame.
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Wow, you guys are broke. I feel sorry for you, maybe you should go steal the D&D books. If you think about it, a D&D book can give you probably EASILY 100+++ hours of enjoyment. Divide that by the price and you get pennies on the hour. Compare that to most any other activity you do for enjoyment, and it is nothing.