Whereas i would say that the environment here has become increasingly less friendly to different playstyles -- "old school" in particular, but others as well -- over the past year or so.
When I first read this, my first reaction was to let this slide, but, y'know what? I don't think so.
You reap what you sow. And I mean that in the general sense of everyone, not you specifically. Reynard, even in this thread, you specifically stated:
Reynard said:
Blame John McCain or Hulk Hogan (yes, pro wrestling is genre entertainment) if you want, but the "action hero" is one who gets "bloodied" but never goes down, who always pulls out a badass move in the end and wins the day. Compare this to earlier, when even Conan was terrified of the undead or demons or magic.
Now, this is factually incorrect. It's been pretty much shown that your interpretation of Conan is not supported by the text. Conan is and was a superhero and every bit as bad assed as any modern hero. Yet, you use that interpretation to completely dismiss later era fantasy as
Reynard said:
Modern genre entertainment tends toward the super-heroic, regardless of the actual genre, and it tends toward badassitude as a major selling point for its heroes. There's less fear, trepidation, uncertainty and just plain retreat and/or failure in modern stories, regardless of medium, than there is in stories from just one or two decades ago.
You then end off with:
It should be no surprise that I prefer AD&D 1E above all other versions of the game, but am comfortable with any edition before 4th (though 3E only up till about 12th level). It's not just the anime inspired kung fu attitude -- I love Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon for example -- but the disconnect from "realism" and "simulation" that creates my generation gap.
as if 4e is "anime inspired kung fu attitude". Gimme a break. You pretty much slam everything 4e and tell everyone that your way is better, more "realistic" and then wonder why you get a negative reaction? Really?
Hrm, 4e=anime, gee where have I heard that before? Oh yeah, I heard it for TEN FREAKING YEARS from grognards bitching about 3e.
If you would like to find a more reasoned discussion, then perhaps couching your criticisms in forms that haven't been repeated ad nauseum for almost a decade might aid in that endevour. Instead of telling me how much better things were in the past, how they were more "pure" and "true to the roots", tell me why those roots are something I should be interested in. Instead of telling me why the things that I like suck, why not tell me why the things you like are actually good.
I double dog dare you.