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Hello there!
I have seen the "OGL" letters in the tittle of the Advanced Player's Guide. Where is the SRD of that book? How can I know what parts of the book is OGL content?
Thanks for your answers.
There is only one SRD, and that's the WotC SRD. Every OGL book contains some degree of open material, designated as such in the book.
In case of APG, pretty much everything (except, of course, artwork and proper names) is open content.
Matter of fact almost every rules element (classes, spells, feats, abilities, monsters*, items etc.) published by Paizo is open content.
* - except the Deep Crow and the Coeurl

Shadowlord |

Hello there!
I have seen the "OGL" letters in the tittle of the Advanced Player's Guide. Where is the SRD of that book? How can I know what parts of the book is OGL content?
Thanks for your answers.
Try d20pfsrd.com, I'm not sure if it has all the content from APG but from what I have seen it has a lot of it.

KaeYoss |

Hello there!
I have seen the "OGL" letters in the tittle of the Advanced Player's Guide. Where is the SRD of that book? How can I know what parts of the book is OGL content?
Thanks for your answers.
OGL means open gaming license, meaning the book has open content which you can use and put into your books and stuff legally (when following some rules). This includes someone making a page where all the open content is collected SRD style.
It does not mean, however, that they have to provide such a collection.
Pathfinder doesn't have a SRD (System Reference Document), but there's the official PRD (Pathfinder Reference Document) HERE. Right now, it only contains the Core Rulebook as well as the Bestiary, but they said that they want to add stuff from the APG too one day (meaning when they have the manpower to spare).
There are other pages containing more than that. D20PFSRD was mentioned, and there's also The Archives of Nethys, which specialises in open content from anything except the RPG books (i.e. Adventure Paths, Campaign Setting books, and so on.)
Note that every book lists what is open content. For Pathfinder, that generally is everything rules-related (i.e. all classes, skills, feats, spells, magic items, races, monsters, etc.) All Pathfinder Setting-related information (which includes names of places, deities, persons, and so on) is not open content, but you could use it in non-profit fanwork using the CUP (community use policy).