I'm A Banana
Potassium-Rich
adembroski said:Picking sides may well be silly, @Kamikaze Midget , but it's a fact that at some point we all will pick sides, unless you're in the business of supporting Wizards for Wizard's sake. Tribalism, as you referred too it, is a fact, whether you would have it so or not. I didn't create it by making this thread, I did not ask people to join the PF army and help me fight off Wizards. No amount of hand holding and kumbiya singing is going to change the fact that people have preferences. You're not going make a PF player like 4e by appealing to their sense of gamer unity... and what this comes down too is that D&DN needs a larger market share, and I don't see it getting one by trying to please everyone.
There are, arguably, lots of important things in the world to pick sides over (Politics, Religion, Honey Boo Boo), but I'm afraid I don't think that how one pretends to be a magical gumdrop elf is one of them. I give people more credit than that. Preferences are real, but they're not allegiances sworn by soldiers under penalty of death. If the PF player wants to play a game where, I dunno, archons are LG outsiders and not elementals, I don't think NEXT intends to stop them. Nor does it, I believe, intend to stop the 4e player from playing a game where archons are elementals. I imagine there's room to play for the guy who wants all at-will magic, and the guy who wants no at-will magic. The one who wants grievously gritty health rules, and the guy who wants inspirational healing. I don't see NEXT deciding that any of these preferences are illegitimate.
The only way NEXT can fail with that is if there are more tribalist goofballs in this hobby and its potential target audience than there are people who just like to play make-believe with weird dice and funny voices.
El Mahdi said:I don't think it's pervasive either, which is why I don't accept the premise of the OP. But I have been noticing more posting of this type lately here on ENWorld; more frequent and more strongly stated. In other words, the fringe minority is getting more vocal and entrenched. Even though I disagree with the OP, it appears to me that this is beginning to spread; though it's very possible it's only my own perception.
I'd really hate to see things devolve back into what we had during the last edition release.
I think there's some "squeaky wheeling" going on, sure. The tribes built during the 3e/4e transition keep people on both sides defensive, ready to lash out at an apparent deviation from their preferred norm. This is going to be especially prominent from the 4e fans, since they're the ones with a game that's on its way out (PF is by all accounts sailing along smoothly), with philosophies underpinning their game that are being re-examined, modularized, and deconstructed. Philosophies that they themselves have spent a lot of time and energy defending, and so are even MORE invested in!
But it takes a lot of energy to be a defender of tribal purity, to police the border and be hyper-vigilant for violations. I'm wagering that D&D fans by and large are more interested in playing D&D in ways they find fun than they are with the way someone else's table plays the game. And if that's true, and if NEXT is good at delivering modularity, it should be fine. And if that's not true, and the less divisive players I'm meeting and talking to on the boards are all exceptional individuals who don't represent the majority of D&D players, then I've been living a sheltered life.
