I'm A Banana
Potassium-Rich
Or when WotC created the roles they named them that way because they match up with MMOrpg terminology and are easily recognizable by many people that would play D&D...A supporting argument would be along the lines of "The simplest reason for WotC choosing those roles was that these are the roles they identified people playing with." Thus, it must be true that D&D as a game had these roles. If some folks played with 'em, the game as a whole had 'em.
These aren't mutually exclusive. MMO's got these ideas from D&D to begin with.
No they aren't ignoring it as it was actually played... what they are saying is that before 4e the term striker as applied to D&D was so nebulous as to have no real meaning...
That is ignoring the game as it was actually played by lots of tables where "striker"/"damage-dealer"/"DPR"/"heavy-hitter"/"spike-damage"/etc. did have real meaning, at least to those playing at that table.
however 4e took the term defined it and then designed classes within those defined constraints... thus they created those roles whole cloth unless they consulted with these hypothetical tables that had been playing D&D with said roles, which I have no reason to believe they did.
Peoples said they did. If you accept that those people are basically honest, that's reason to believe they did. If you don't accept that, then I don't know why you're continuing to have a conversation with people you think are liars.

Imaro said:I never claimed they were, but I bet if you ask them to define it you'll probably get a nebulous answer at best (and probably wildly differing in that nebulousness)... as we did in this thread when i asked the question.
If I ask you to specifically define what "rock and roll" is, we're going to get onto a slippery slope, too. A strict definition isn't possible or useful. A functional definition -- this is how people actually did the thing and how they experienced it -- is much more useful. And that we have in abundance.
Imaro said:This makes no sense to me, with the number of houserules, variants, etc. that people use in D&D where is the line drawn? or can we just claim any and everything is a part of D&D since someone somewhere might have done it...
The latter.
If you say you're "playing D&D" and you're playing Pathfinder, you're playing D&D. If you say you're "playing D&D" and you run a D&D-brand board game, you're playing D&D. If you say you're "playing D&D" and you run GURPS, you're playing D&D. If you say you're "playing D&D" and you run around the forest and whack each other with foam weapons, you're playing D&D.
If 8e comes out and it's GURPS with whiffle bats, it will just be confirming the way some tables have played D&D forever.
In functional reality, of course, the bounds are not solidly drawn, but are there. It's like the edge of the solar system, or the difference between Rock and Blues, or gender identity. It's an analog continuum based on our own constructs, not a binary divide that exists in empirical science. If someone can't strictly define what a "striker" was before 4e, that doesn't mean they weren't playing REAL D&D (tm) when they played D&D and had strikers. It just means their definition of D&D might not make a circle with yours in a Venn diagram.