(snip) Soft covers almost completely went away and the rest of their production values were also raised. (snip)
... with the exception of editing. Editing was a production value that, IMO, declined over time. Stat blocks were a major culprit but the number of basic errors in later products seemed to expand. Let's hope 4E doesn't follow suit.
The Rules Compendium was one of the really useful final products for 3.5E. In a same vein, perhaps we may have been able to see compilations of feats and prestige classes, and perhaps even base classes, to round out the 3.5E products.
Some good adventures would have been appreciated. The Expedition series included were lacklustre at best, IMO, but I liked the smaller
Sinister Spire and
Fortress of the Yuan-ti and think some other smaller adventures like this would have been good.
I think there was also room to reissue a revised Epic Level Handbook but not until it had actually been playtested or developed or... heck anything other than the slapdash process that was used the first time.
The Forgotten Realms could have seen some introductory products. Imagine a base town threatened by some FR factions and, say, a trilogy of adventures that supported that (oh, for a change, have the adventures
edited) and actually showed DMs what a campaign set in FR could be like when you ignore the novels and what people post as fact when it is only opinion on messageboards.
I would have loved to have seen books on Fey, Giants and Savage Humanoids (orcs, goblinoids etc...) plus the third Fiendish Codex.
Oh well, one can only dream....
