lutecius
Explorer
yes, the marketing certainly didn't help.I think it all comes back to not just the killing of D&D sacred cows in 4e, but doing so with literal glee and pride. It was both the content of the changes, and the way in which they were presented that caused an even deeper fracture.
rivalry explains edition wars, it's not what makes people pick a side in the first place (ie like or dislike a new edition).The problem is twofold. Biggest is the problem of rivalry [...]
the stated goal of PF was backwards compatibility, that's not the point of a new edition.1) The change is rediculously minute, and I mean rediculously. To put it in perspective, Pathfinder changed an absurdly small amount, and is closer to being 3.55 then it is 3.75, and there's still people who hate it for changing too much.
oh yeah, resistance to change. I hear that a lot from people who approve some changes and have a hard time accepting that many others don't (not talking about you or even gamers in particular, I've also heard that about vista or work procedures that were eventually abandoned...)3) Make a new edition. Boom, schism.
And that's the second problem: we hate change. […]
I stopped playing a couple of years after AD&D2's release precisely because it didn't change enough. 3e brought me back because I loved the changes but I was ready for a new, very different edition long before 4e was announced. I just happened to hate the shift toward gamist design.
others probably had different experiences but my point is tastes and the changes themselves are what matters. more often than not, this "resistance to change" marketing/corporate bspeak tells more about its proponents mindset than anything else.
and I don't think it needed to reach this proportion. the fact that 4e's lead developer acknowledges this rift and all but admits that they did something wrong with 4e only confirms my impression.So, to answer all three questions in one go: Yeah, there was going to be a split, a messy one, and I don't think it could be mended, and I don't think it could be avoided.
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