Wik
First Post
If we are going to include different lines of product, and all smaller products...There were quite a few forgotten for 3e/3.5 which would be
D20 Modern
D&D Basic 3.5 (Black Dragon)
D&D Basic 3.5 (Blue Dragon)
Star Wars D20
all of those are just as much D20 as B/X BECMI were D&D.
Sorry. You can't say Star Wars d20 is just as much D&D as BECMI. They are entirely different beasts. However, I agree with you that including D&D Basic in the revision schedule was kind of deceptful.
Unearthed Arcana was also for 3.5
Yes, but it was all house rules. It was not an "expansion" for the game, so much as a wonderful book of options. For the record, it is is my favourite wotc book, and I can't wait until they do one for 4e.
I might accept the 2e revision...but there was probably just as big a difference between the original 3e core rulebook printing...and the final 3e (prior to 3.5) erratta...in which case as the errata was easily online you'd have to add
You're confused on this. You're thinking the poster was talking about the black cover reprints (the ones with the "this is not third edition! There, everyone can rest easy" prologue that always cracks me up). What was actually being referred to was "2e's Essentials" in a sense - Skills and Powers, Combat and Tactics, High Level Campaigns, and Spells and Magic. These books drastically altered the way the game was played, and are very much 2.5E.
This, by the way, leaves us with:
OD&D
AD&D 1e
Unearthed Arcana + Survival Guides
AD&D 2e
Skills and Powers & Friends
D&D 3e
3.5e
D&D 4e
D&D Essentials
Someone else can supply the years each came out. But the fact is, it's still pretty frequent revision.
Moreover if we include optional books which could have significant impact on the game (such as Unearthed Arcana 1e) we would then have to include the 2e player options (which many call 2.5), but with 3e that would includ All the Class books (with as many classes and feats I'd say they were as significant as some of the 2.5 Options books), and then with 3.5 the Complete Books version, Players Handbook II, Unearthed Arcana...and lest we forget...the BIG one...book of Nine Swords...and though not really popular...possibly Incarnum.
First, and don't take this too much as a criticism, I think people would respond to what you're saying if you use fewer run-on sentences. This bit quoted is all one sentence, and it makes you come off as a breathless, ranting sort of fellow. A quick once-over before posting to clarify your idea is always helpful.
Anyways, onto the point at hand, I think Unearthed Arcana, when coupled with the two Survival Guides, really changed the way the game was played and perceived - which to me, constitutes being considered a "revision" in a way that splat books never will.
I agree that if you use the magic book w/ reserve feats and bo9s in 3e, you would be well suited to be considered playing a new version of the game - those books make D&D drastically different.
PS: As I said...if D&D ceases to be published in a few years...most likely after 5e...you can't say this came out of nowhere...that no one expected it or warned you...or even pointed out the problems. Of course seeing some of the blind responses here I expect a LOT of whining from people who can't believe that bad marketing skills would lead to the demise of WotC or D&D. On the otherhand, maybe I'm the one in the wrong...but we won't really know for a few years yet...
This is the part I don't get. You're calling other posters "blind" when they are posting well-reasoned arguments to your posts, which are promptly ignored as you type furiously back. This all makes me think that they're not blind... you're deaf.