ProfessorCirno said:The difference is that in 3e or 4e you can actually show your character was a turnip farmer, rather then say "Despite being completely identical to the heroic and brave warlord's son I just had, here's a brand new character who farmed turnips."
Sure, yes. Gary thought of the D&D rules as suggestions, to be modified, subtracted from, added to, at each table to suit taste. Though that's more true of OD&D than AD&D, which was intended, to some extent, to reduce deviations from the 'D&D norm', such as Monty Haul-ism.There is no reason at all, nor were you ever prohibited from having that!
I'm not sure what you're trying to say here. All I really said was that his definitions are too limiting.
He presented an either/or. EITHER the character is defined by numbers and abilities OR the character is defined by personality and background. This is a classic false dichotomy. We are not required to choose one or the other. It can be both. It can be neither. You could define your character entirely based on how the mini looks, if you want to.
Personally, I like systems that give me the option of expressing a character's background, training, personality, etc through mechanical choices, but that doesn't mean the mechanics are primary. They're just one of the ways I express the character. Am I defining my character by mechanics or by fluff? Hell, I can't tell which is the chicken and which is the egg, and I made the character. And my experience suggests that there's constant cross-pollination between the two.
An individual can choose to limit their "character building" to just the fluffier stuff or just the crunchier stuff, but Lanefan's argument is structured to say that they must limit themselves that way. That is patently false.
That is false. The difference is that we don't need to deal with obstacles to doing so.
The difference is that in old D&D, the game is not about acquiring paperwork to prove former turnip-farming status.
Bureaucracy games and turnip-farming games can be fun. Some of us sometimes like to play instead a classic adventure game called "D&D", though.
That said, I don't think the activity in question is a case of multitasking.
Look around. There are a lot of "definitive official rules" sets out there! Your favorite zero-sum game is very far from being the only thing that is not old D&D!Doug McCrae said:But otoh there was always this strand in D&D of people who wanted definitive official rules, who didn't want to houserule at all.
Kung Fu CB Mamas On Wheels Versus The Aztec Wrestling Nuns.
There's a character sheet in the Murphy's Rules compilation (of cartoons from The Space Gamer) published by Steve Jackson Games some years ago.Dausuul said:I must have this game.