Cheapskate that I am, I recommend D&D books to my local Public Library, let them pay for it, borrow and read it, then decide if I want to pay for my own book (or just xerox off the most interesting pages).I am curious, who even buys a D&D book that doesn't want to read it? I mean, I get that someone wants a subclass or background in the book they buy... but that negates all the other material in it as if it is of no interest. That seems like a preposterous notion.
I don't mind reprints as long as they don't over do it.
Not every player was around 5 years ago. And it's useful for AL not that I play it but still.
OK, maybe a bit hyperbolic, and yes, the announcement of Tasha's Cauldron is recent news, but I suspect the conversation will still revolve around Tashas and not RotFM. I think it shows that expanded character options get a lot more attention to adventure paths. Which makes total sense.
As an aside, how does everyone feel about reprinting subclasses in this book that appear elsewhere (like bladesinger, eloquence bard, etc)?
Doesn't sit right with me, and for people who bought those previous versions have a legit beef, IMO
I think it might be more that they are reprinting because players are less likely to buy a book for a setting but more likely to buy one which has options. If you don't care about everyone but want to play an artificer this let's a player buy something which is better than a setting book as it contains a bunch more player options that they might also use.They're reprinting due to the PHB +1 rule in AL (and adopted by many home tables).
Im OK with it.