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Obryn said:
OK, then, we can go down the rabbit hole.
Indeed.
Original Question (rephrased as a question): Is it true that "WotC....knew that the online tools would have limitations and a particular focus, and they designed the system with attention to excluding those limitations and addressing that focus"?
Ask yourself can you play D&D 4e with out D&D Insider? If you answer yes, then you have the answer. D&D Insider compliments 4e play and adds to it but is not integral to actually playing a 4e D&D game. D&D Insider is dependent on 4e not the other way around.
The OP didn't ask if DDI was necessary to play D&D, which is what The Rouse answered. (Since this has been pointed out prior to my chiming in on this thread, had you actually read the thread you would know this. Perhaps you do.)
The simple answer is no 4e was not designed to play easier on a computer.
The OP asked about rules and my answer is no the rules were not designed to work with a computer.
Again, not answers to the question asked. Of course, here The Rouse may simply have been confused by the way the OP worded the question. The OP is not asking (anywhere AFAICT) if the rules were intended be used with a computer, or if it was intended to be easier to play on a computer than off. He is not asking if it was the intent of WotC to make a game that requires DDI in order to play, thus forcing people into a subscription model.
He is asking if foreknowledge of expected limitations of the DDI influenced rules construction.
I think you are reading too much into this. Rules can support an online application and not be beholden to them.
Again, not what the OP asked, although the next bit is closer. (BTW, strange grammar there, Scott.....the anticedent of "them" must be "rules" because of the plural.

)
It's not like the design & development teams took a look at a particular rule and said "we can't design it that way, it will never work on the character builder".
This
seems to answer the question on the surface, but it only says that there was not a
particular kind of (shall we say, rather extreme?) influence. Not unlike the statements WotC made when it was rumoured that 4e was in the works, so that they were later able to deny
actually having said that 4e was not. For instance, this response doesn't at all relate to how the combat-focused nature of 4e character abilities might have been influenced by an online model.
Or, for that matter, how the
distribution of rules (i.e., what comes out when, and in what book) might have been influenced by the expectation of selling DDI subsriptions by way of offering previews. (Which is a good idea, with nothing wrong with it, but wraps into the OP's question, and is not addressed by The Rouse's answer).
The expectation of a digital battlemat might (as the OP suggests) limit mobility to within what the digital battlemat is expected to handle, within any given encounter, without any designer saying "we can't design it that way, it will never work on the character builder."
It doesn't answer the question.
Likewise "So yes from a business standpoint launching D&Di with 4e was the best decision (this is what Bill is alluding too) but this had little to no impact on rules choices. Those rules choices more likely came out what the R&D team wanted to see in the game system after years of playing 3e among other games and game systems." does not mean "Rules decisions in 4e were not influenced by the limitations of the ddi model".
Indeed, parsed out, The Rouse is saying "launching D&Di with 4e...had little to no impact on rules choices" (remember those pronouns and anticedents?). This could just as easily be a statement that the concurrent launch date had no impact. And the OP isn't talking about the launch date. Again, very, very similar to some wishy-washy answers around the 4e release which were defended.....by
you, if memory serves.....with the old "Well, they didn't actually say....." routine.
Frankly, I am tired of the "Well, they didn't actually say....." routine.
YMMV, and obviously does.
BTW, asking for a clear answer is never a "rhetorical club" unless the person being asked for a clear answer is being evasive.
Which may be why The Rouse was able to respond with a clear answer.
Frankly, I am tired of the evasive routine as well.
YMMV, and obviously does.
RC