But you've chimed in and said, no, you want it to be official. You want it to have high production values.
I think this is a reasonable expectation. I purchased tons of 3rd party material during 3E, remain a huge fan of the system and the open license, but just think this is one area where WOTC fell short. I admit, it was nice having such high volume material at the time. Would have been nice to have high quality production modules on top of that. What I am saying is I just never found myself enjoying the official WOTC products after the core book (with a few exceptions). And would have liked to see them put out some strong module series.
No, I gave the wrong impression there. I don't care about the form (all a boxed set gives you is a fold out map a seperate booklets (occassional overlays, dice and stock cards). What I want is the kind of content you used to get in those boxed sets: great locations, great setting and background information, excellent adventures, etc. They were comprehensive. You could easily reproduce this in a large book.
You want a mix of setting and adventure material.
Yes, and I don't think I am alone here. This might not be your thing, and that is fine, but I like having lots of setting material and modules for inspriation. When the two are combined, even better.
You want a specific length.
No. I just want length, more than a 12 page dungeon adventure. Want a full sized module. I wasn't really complaining about the length of 3rd part or even official modules during 3E, just explaining why Dungeon wasn't enough for me (I liked dungeon but I do have a host of reasons why it didn't cover the ground of official module material).
You don't like adventure paths.
Yes, this is something that just never clicked for me.
You want professional writers.
Personally I am not hung up on a the writer's credentials. I may have overstated this point. I do want good quality adventures. While dungeon was good at times, there were entire issues I found I couldn't use.
You want them exactly like the modules you really liked form about 1990 or so... except, y'know, different.
Not at all. I just want them to take a lesson from some of the things going on from the 80s to 90s. There was also a lot of problems with modules form that period. No denying that. Like I said in another post, I don't want to go back to 1982 or 1990.