For me, buying a WotC book feels wrong right now, so I'm holding off on it.
But it's also something I'm often COMPELLED to do, so I'm discussing it.
Heh. Well, you still have a week and a half for that feeling to subside.
For me, buying a WotC book feels wrong right now, so I'm holding off on it.
But it's also something I'm often COMPELLED to do, so I'm discussing it.
Back to the freeware OD&D clones for me.
But, damn them, lately they've been selling stuff I like!Ultimately, D&D fans only have to put up with Whiz on the Customers as long as they choose to put up with them.
But, damn them, lately they've been selling stuff I like!
(and a free copy of something I don't like ain't much of a bargain)
I am curious. What kind of great 3PP support does Pathfinder have? Paizo's stuff is good, but with regards to Pathfinder, they aren't third party, but rather first party. I know NG will eventually do something, but aside from NG, who in the industry who makes great stuff have announced their official support for Pathfinder?
I'm in complete agreement with you TwoWolves.
Ah, terminology problem.
Pathfinder IS third-party to the original developer (WotC). Taking 3.5, fixing a few bugs, streamlining things and giving it a new title doesn't make it a first-party title anymore than buying a house, fixing the roof, painting the walls and adding a garage makes you the original architect.
But, as a 3PP (compatible with 3.5 AND its own special-brew 3.5) its fantastic! And that means it is compatible (with conversion) with WotCs 1PP D&D stuff, all the back-catalog of various d20 supplements (from Goodman's DCCs to the Book of Arcane Might) but its still 3.5 based and unless there is some real innovative bug-fixing, its still going to have a lot of the things I DISLIKE about 3.5 along with the things I like (such as stacking rules, magic-as-silver-bullet, and high-level sluggishness in play).
I remain open-minded though. Moreso than I did a few months back...