billd91
Not your screen monkey (he/him) 🇺🇦🇵🇸🏳️⚧️
But what if it's a Rome/Avignon schism?!?I don't think we are gonna exactly get a Protestant/Catholic schism here.

But what if it's a Rome/Avignon schism?!?I don't think we are gonna exactly get a Protestant/Catholic schism here.
Sure, but 5e is almost 10 years old. How many games are continually freely updated and patched for 10 years straight? There are some, but they are the exception rather than the rule. Eventually, you want to churn out a full sequel and start making money all over again.It really is different. Updates to the base game are generally free in video games, and hard to avoid, so everyone is basically on the same page. DLC is extra, but is more like an rpg supplement in that it's there if you want, but you have to opt in.
Could be. I'm just surprised to hear that younger gamers aren't completely used to nowadays' crappy commercial practices yet.I think (and I may be way off I have not been young since the T rex went extinct) that we still sell the TTRPG as 'not video games'. I doubt either (although I don't really know them and only have seen 1 of the 2 of them before in passing) would be suprised at the new madien or assassins creed game coming out, but the idea that D&D could change so soon seemed to shock them.
in my own group we are all 3e or older players so I am not sure at all... my niece and nephew both stared playing around end of 4e along with 'no thankkyou evil' so they already know of the edition wheel spinning
MMOs.Sure, but 5e is almost 10 years old. How many games are continually freely updated and patched for 10 years straight? There are some, but they are the exception rather than the rule. Eventually, you want to churn out a full sequel and start making money all over again.
Obviously. They print the name "D&D" or "Dungeons and Dragons" on the cover.Defining D&D is like that of porn, you know it if you see.
Diablo 2 was released in 2000. Its latest patch was 2016. But then it got a re-release as Diablo 2: Resurrected in 2021.Sure, but 5e is almost 10 years old. How many games are continually freely updated and patched for 10 years straight? There are some, but they are the exception rather than the rule. Eventually, you want to churn out a full sequel and start making money all over again.
MMOs.
The goal post has now been moved.Sure, but they have other ways to monetise your play experience.
If WotC does what they say they intend to do, this whole conversation will seem ridiculous in a few years. When you can walk into a store, grab an updated PHB when you feel like it, go home and still use it with your Rime of the Frostmaiden campaign you've been planning to run, and it works fine, folks will be like "eh." I'm sure you will get the occasional grognard insisting that only the 2014 PHB is real D&D, but most conversations will be something like: Player: "Are we using the updated Bardic inspiration rules?" DM: "Sure." I don't think we are gonna exactly get a Protestant/Catholic schism here.
It really is different. Updates to the base game are generally free in video games, and hard to avoid, so everyone is basically on the same page. DLC is extra, but is more like an rpg supplement in that it's there if you want, but you have to opt in.
Yes, I mentioned that there are some exceptions to the rule, thank you for providing an example.MMOs.
I’m sure we can easily provide a few more examples if we put our minds to it. Then, we’ll have to look at the literal hundreds of examples of the opposite.Diablo 2 was released in 2000. Its latest patch was 2016. But then it got a re-release as Diablo 2: Resurrected in 2021.
Diablo 3 was released in 2012. Still being patched in 2022.
Starcraft 1 and Brood War were released in 1998. Its latest update was patch 1.23.10, which was in September 2022.
Guild Wars 1 (2005) had three patches this year.
It's a lot more common than you think, especially as many PC games involve online co-op play.