I'm A Banana
Potassium-Rich
pemerton said:Do you categorise "probably not inclined to play it" as "can't abide it"?
Depends on if the inclination is based on a fair and provisional analysis of the information known thus far and not an instinctive hostility to that which is not one's preferred way of playing imaginary elves.
Given how early it is in the NEXT process, how much flexibility they state that they wish to offer, and how the open playtest is not the same as a rules preview, I'm not so sure I'd trust prognostication of eventual interest or lack thereof at the moment.
Regardless of my categorization, people are free to play whatever they want for whatever arbitrary reason they want, and I'm sure there's going to be more than a few active message board posters who won't play NEXT because it's not 4e, or it's not 3e, or it's not 1e, or it's not OD&D. Given that 4e is the edition being nixed, I expect the preponderance of it to be 4e fans not going softly into that dark night of playing the game they like even though it may not be actively supported by the official company anymore.
But I don't think that this represents a fundamental schism in the player base that is deeply intractable and at odds. I think this more likely represents a fringe group of the emotionally intractable, and those players are lost regardless of what WotC does. They cannot be easily appeased, because what they want is not viable for the company for one reason or another. Those fans don't want the change. They don't want to adapt their warlord to modules and maneuvers, they want to keep playing the Warlord basically as it is. They want the thing that is being cancelled (or has been cancelled) to not be cancelled anymore, and that's not something that can happen.
That's different from those who, say, are worried about NEXT maybe not having inspirational healing, but who'd be perfectly fine if there was an option to add it, because they like it, and want it in their games, and if NEXT doesn't have it as an option, they're not that interested in it. Rather than "can't abide it," I would categorize these folks as "apprehensive about the apparent direction of NEXT." Which I think is a fair position to take, but also says nothing about if they're going to like the game when it launches or not.
I've got a buddy worried he won't easily be able to play a wizard who runs out of spells. He probably won't play NEXT if that's not an easy option for him. He's got a legit concern that his playstyle won't be something he can do with the system. I think he'd be wrong to say he probably won't play it, though, because the thing is so nebulous and fluid right now, I'm not sure he can really say that he WON'T be able to do what he wants.
Of course, if my pet dream about them opening up every edition to OGL and administering an online marketplace of publish-your-own rules supplements is to come to fruition, fans of no edition will have much to worry about in the long run. I admit that's a fever-dream born of my unassailable optimism, however.

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