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<blockquote data-quote="Dausuul" data-source="post: 8446929" data-attributes="member: 58197"><p>I'd guess it wasn't so much a relaxing of the rules, more of an acceptance.</p><p></p><p>It's weird to think of it now, but back when 5E came out, everything was done super cheap. The team that built 5E was tiny--I believe less than ten people. They did not put any money into digital offerings, instead relying on licensing deals with partners who were willing to front the initial cash (first Trapdoor, who crashed and burned, and then Curse, who built D&D Beyond). And they went with a slow production schedule that could be sustained by a skeleton crew plus freelancers as needed.</p><p></p><p>I believe the creators of 5E simply accepted that they wouldn't be a "core brand," and designed their game to be sustainable on a non-core budget. By that point, D&D had been through multiple rounds of layoffs, so they no longer had to justify a large payroll to Hasbro. The irony is that it was this pared-back vision which led to hitting the core brand mark after all.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dausuul, post: 8446929, member: 58197"] I'd guess it wasn't so much a relaxing of the rules, more of an acceptance. It's weird to think of it now, but back when 5E came out, everything was done super cheap. The team that built 5E was tiny--I believe less than ten people. They did not put any money into digital offerings, instead relying on licensing deals with partners who were willing to front the initial cash (first Trapdoor, who crashed and burned, and then Curse, who built D&D Beyond). And they went with a slow production schedule that could be sustained by a skeleton crew plus freelancers as needed. I believe the creators of 5E simply accepted that they wouldn't be a "core brand," and designed their game to be sustainable on a non-core budget. By that point, D&D had been through multiple rounds of layoffs, so they no longer had to justify a large payroll to Hasbro. The irony is that it was this pared-back vision which led to hitting the core brand mark after all. [/QUOTE]
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