Scribble
First Post
I think I might be petty, but I'd be annoyed by this, largely because time and design effort would have been taken away from 4e material to support the older editions. I want the advancement of the current edition to be the designers' sole concern at this point, not any sort of apologist outreach. I want them to show me what they can do with the current systems, how they can grow and expand and push those, what they can add to them, show me a setting that's new and uniquely 4e (what I think many of us are clamoring for). Attempting to be universal feels the opposite of that, in my opinion, anyway.
I don't know if I agree with "apologist."
Also I think this falls into the same category that I see when people say the board games detract from the RPG... Which is just because one thing is made doesn't mean the resources would have been earmarked to the RPG had it not been.
In any case you're welcome to your opinion of course, and I doubt it will happen anyway, but I wonder- if there is money in it (and their are obviously still people playing all editions) why shouldn't they?
D&D obviously has a long tradition/history of only supporting the current edition, but really is there a need to do that? Especially since people seem to find differences in each edition.
There's room on people's shelves for multiple systems- why not multiple editions of the same system as well? I know I never got rid of any of my older edition material; It still works and it's still fun.
Maybe if they let everyone have support for their toys, we might see less arguing about which rule is the right rule, and more talking about abandoned temples to ancient frog gods.
That's probably just a pipe dream though.