Tony Vargas
Legend
It's not an easy answer, but I'd say "it's flaws." D&D was the first RPG and it was relentlessly imitated. For the most part, more successful RPGs pulled the good stuff from D&D and tried other things where it wasn't so great. Apparently, by the 90s this had culminated in a syndrome oddly labeled 'fantasy heartbreaker,' in which D&D imitators would be very D&D-ish, but for one big improvement or cool idea (apparently, almost always including ditching Vancian).what gives D&D its identity? No easy answer there.

Anyway, the upshot of everyone trying to imitate and improve on your original is that what distinguishes the original is the bits no one wants to imitate. The flaws. Maybe not the worst most intractable flaws, but the ones it's relatively easy to fix or leave out of an imitator.
The obvious 4venger answer is because there were no legitimate criticisms to level at it. ;PWhy did so many of us see 4e as the obvious next evolutionary step in D&D and others saw it as a repudiation of everything that came before, to the point the "4e isn't D&D" became a forum meme?
Really, though, the two perceptions are not at all at odds, no matter how much the folks holding them may have been. Something 'evolves,' it changes. Something changes enough, it's no longer the same thing.
If your'e explaining it to anyone outside the hobby, saying you're playing D&D would probably be your best bet at getting the idea across.I can't say I agree with that. If I port Forgotten Realms over to the Savage Worlds system, I wouldn't say I'm playing D&D.

Exactly. So freaking out when it changes, re-boots, or gets retconned is a little silly. But, that's never going to stop us. Ever.Canon grows organically over time, with each new product adding and expanding to canon.

There was 5 years of 0D&D before the PHB.The D&D multiverse started with the PHB. That was the seed.
Gods, Demi-gods, & Heroes.That seed opened with Deities & Demigods
No question. And the vision of the D&D they care about is subtly different for each of them.People care about D&D. It's important to them.
The question is, can we respect that diversity? Or does caring about D&D always have to expand into dictating how others can play it?
Yes, it does say something about me and people like me. It says that we value and respect continuity.
Hey, have a little respect for the continuity of Greek & Roman myth, here. It'd be Aphrodite & Zeus or Venus & Jupiter. And, it was Athena who sprang fully-formed from the head of Zeus. Don't go contradicting the cannon like that. ;PCanon doesn't spring fully formed from a book like Venus from Zeus.
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