I believe the quote actually says "drop in"--i.e., add them. To be precise . . .
What exactly was the great thing in the earlier editions that was missing in 3e/4e?That they seem to be trying to hearken back to earlier (as in, much earlier) versions - at least to some extent - gives me hope.
If the end result is merely a 3e-4e hybrid, however, I'll be sorely disappointed.
Lan-"and the number shall be five; not six, not four..."-efan
What exactly was the great thing in the earlier editions that was missing in 3e/4e?
Rules? Flavor?
Thanks for the clarification. I misread ths.
What exactly was the great thing in the earlier editions that was missing in 3e/4e?
Rules? Flavor?
3E came out in the year 2000 and Essentials is not a new edition, so it's:
2000-2013 (13 Year Span): 3e, 3.5, 4E, 5E
Thats still a fast release of new editions, but not as bad as you have written. Also I want to point out that the shortest Edition from that was 3E and 4E will be 5 years in the market, which is the same as 3.5.
(Source: Dungeons & Dragons - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia )
So we are not getting the VTT? AKA, the only thing that can possibly invigorate D&D in the current era?
Wow. I guess Hasbro really has no faith in the D&D IP.
I can't see 5e succeeding in their "please everyone" fantasy. They can't make it Old School enough to please Old Schoolers at the same time pleasing fans of 3e and 4e.
I wonder who will create the "Pathfinder" version of 4e?
Wouldn't that be a hoot that WotC would be forced to compete with Pathfinder, the OSR and a 4e clone plus all those people who didn't leave 3e and 4e!!!
Talk about a house divided.
<snip>
Can't happen, as the GSL doesn't allow it to happen. This is the major criticism of the OGL, it allowed someone else to pick up the previous addition and make DnD it's own competitor.
...Picture that says way more then 1000 words
Not sure if anyone else has mentioned this yet, but lately here at EnWorld, there have been quite a few posts of people saying that they left 4e for Pathfinder... and now are back playing 4e because they remember why they left 3.x in the first place.Yeah, it is. I can't give numbers, but I've seen countless "I've left 4E for Pathfinder threads" on forums and am part of gaming group that left 4E for Pathfinder. I've heard it enough that is seems to be a fairly common occurance.
What exactly was the great thing in the earlier editions that was missing in 3e/4e?
Rules? Flavor?