Raven Crowking
First Post
Wait, what?
You're touting full healing between all encounters as ideal gameplay, insofar as to say it's "a shame" for that to not be commonplace?
AFAICT, the "shame" is that "IMHO, and IME, full healing between all encounters was not common to any prior edition. An argument that relies upon the idea that it is fails for me on that basis."
I've said it in other threads, and I'll say it again here: If you approached earlier edition D&D in the same manner as 4e is designed to be approached, it's going to be much harder for you to grasp why others have problems.
But, let us say that Bob and Sue are discussing radio dramas. Bob doesn't like them; he prefers a picture. Sue says, "But I always closed my eyes and just listened to the TV!"
That may explain why Sue sees no real difference, but it fails utterly as a response to Bob's concern.
When Sue says, "It's a shame you didn't close your eyes, too!" it may express some desire on Sue's part that Bob share her preferences, but it also utterly fails as a response to Bob's concern.
Compound this now: Bob says that the radio drama is too "auditory", and Sue claims that she doesn't understand what he means. No matter how he tries to explain it, Sue just keeps coming back with (1) there was as auditory component to TV, too, and (2) although she understands Bob's position enough to dismiss it outright Bob just hasn't communicated his position clearly enough to be understood.
Let me repeat, in case the dichotomy isn't obvious enough: Although she understands Bob's position enough to dismiss it outright Bob just hasn't communicated his position clearly enough to be understood.
It is, actually, an inarguable fact that Bob has not communicated clearly enough to be understood. Although, again, Sue understands just enough to know that Bob is wrong.
On top of that, Sue keeps claiming that Bob just isn't rational in his position.
Sorry, but from where I am standing, it seems to me that this is entirely Sue's problem.
RC