pukunui
Legend
I tried. It was the least amount of fun I’ve had DMing an adventure for as long as I can remember. Please don’t dismiss my experience just because it doesn’t jive with yours.Nah it’s pretty fun to just run as is, too.
I tried. It was the least amount of fun I’ve had DMing an adventure for as long as I can remember. Please don’t dismiss my experience just because it doesn’t jive with yours.Nah it’s pretty fun to just run as is, too.
I didn’t dismiss anything, you just tried to speak definitively as if no one would have a different experience.I tried. It was the least amount of fun I’ve had DMing an adventure for as long as I can remember. Please don’t dismiss my experience just because it doesn’t jive with yours.
And it made so much money that they have made two other major setting books since then, and explicitly wouldn’t have, had Ravnica not sold very very well.Yeah, but they could've made a different setting book to make money. It was the first real setting book of 5e, and they chose the setting that basically nobody asked for.
Yeah, but they could've made a different setting book to make money. It was the first real setting book of 5e, and they chose the setting that basically nobody asked for.
And it made so much money that they have made two other major setting books since then, and explicitly wouldn’t have, had Ravnica not sold very very well.
Yeah, but they could've made a different setting book to make money. It was the first real setting book of 5e, and they chose the setting that basically nobody asked for.
Yeah they are really right in the sweet spot, for me. It’s mostly just where exactly in the groove we’d rather be, it seems.My ideal release schedule is pretty close to what we have now:
- One major hardcover a Fiscal Quarter
- 1-2 Adventure books, new Storylines or classic ports like Saltmarsh
- 2-3 Setting books, mixing player options, DMtools,monsters and Setting detail (including tons of Adventure building tools)
I feel dumb now. Forgot Wildemount.Technically 3. One just got delayed.
Yeah they are really right in the sweet spot, for me. It’s mostly just where exactly in the groove we’d rather be, it seems.