jayoungr
Legend
I'm sorry, but you can't say "full stop" when Curse of Strahd exists. It may not be exactly what you want, but it's not the Forgotten Realms.I'll believe it when I see it. D&D is now the Forgotten Realms RPG. Full stop.
I'm sorry, but you can't say "full stop" when Curse of Strahd exists. It may not be exactly what you want, but it's not the Forgotten Realms.I'll believe it when I see it. D&D is now the Forgotten Realms RPG. Full stop.
But that doesn't mean Greyhawk is particularly likely to show up.Also, characters from Greyhawk in particular keep showing up...
Sure but that's speculation.If one looks at the pattern of Unearthed Arcana play tests, there seems to be a strong indication that Eberron is going to get a sourcebook for 5e before the end of the 5e run.
How many years are the gaming community willing to just take their word for it, I gather.Whenever any of the primary designers are asked about settings, they say that they do plan on getting to them.
How many years are the gaming community willing to just take their word for it, I gather.
I find it increasingly baffling how people are simply going along with this. I would have thought WotC would have been buried under an avalanche of complaints about lack of setting support by now, so very many years after release.
I'm amazed how accepting you lot all seem to be of the fact D&D is mostly there to make Hasbro money on movies, toys and games... With the actual rpg as a sideshow run on the cheap with just a handful of devs...
Why would they, when most people use a homebrew setting?How many years are the gaming community willing to just take their word for it, I gather.
I find it increasingly baffling how people are simply going along with this. I would have thought WotC would have been buried under an avalanche of complaints about lack of setting support by now, so very many years after release.
*cough* Ravenloft *cough*What's increasingly like cold hard facts is:
There is no setting support at all for any setting during the first FIVE years of 5th edition, except Forgotten Realms, and even there the support is pretty minimal.
Right is the point.How many years are the gaming community willing to just take their word for it, I gather.
I find it increasingly baffling how people are simply going along with this. I would have thought WotC would have been buried under an avalanche of complaints about lack of setting support by now, so very many years after release.
5e is still selling well. It will take a prolonged dip in sales followed by an unsuccessful attempt at boosting sales before they think about 6e. And even then, it will take a couple years to make a change.I sure hope you all won't be upset when WotC, in just a few years from now, announce 6th edition (or 5th edition Enhanced...) and the cycle starts over again.
Brace yourself Zapp.... D&D has always been about making money. Gary wasn't giving the books away. It wasn't a charity or free ruleset. He made it a business.I'm amazed how accepting you lot all seem to be of the fact D&D is mostly there to make Hasbro money on movies, toys and games... With the actual rpg as a sideshow run on the cheap with just a handful of devs...
I'm sorry, but you can't say "full stop" when Curse of Strahd exists. It may not be exactly what you want, but it's not the Forgotten Realms.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.