D&D (2024) So Will 'OneD&D' (6E) Actually Be Backwards Compatible?

Will OD&D Be Backwards Compatible?

  • Yes

    Votes: 114 58.8%
  • No

    Votes: 80 41.2%


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Suppose it depends on your sub level. 🤷‍♂️
Nope.

You can't access the current versions unless one of two conditions is met:

1) You own MotM.

2) You "play"* in a campaign with someone with MotM who has a Master-tier sub (them not you) and they have content sharing on.

If you can see the non-legacy versions of things like Yuan-ti or Genasi, one of those is true.

* = This can be very much "technically" - i.e. you just have a PC in a campaign, don't need to actually play them.
 

Scribe

Legend
I think it will be.

1. Thats been the goal.
2. Its the most successful version of the game by far, and they know this.
3. What direction can they go, which wouldnt put their user base at risk?

They arent going to go into making the game more complex, and it cant get much simpler or more basic.
 

Parmandur

Book-Friend
Nope.

You can't access the current versions unless one of two conditions is met:

1) You own MotM.

2) You "play"* in a campaign with someone with MotM who has a Master-tier sub (them not you) and they have content sharing on.

If you can see the non-legacy versions of things like Yuan-ti or Genasi, one of those is true.

* = This can be very much "technically" - i.e. you just have a PC in a campaign, don't need to actually play them.
Yeah, I'm very certain the whole "Legacy Content" and how it is handled is a test run for 2014 Core.
 

Iosue

Legend
Let me put it this way: I don’t expect it to be any less compatible than A5E. The core will remain the same. Some classes may be “better” than their 2014 counterparts, but in the end, you’ll be able to play 2014e adventures with the 2024e rules, and vice-versa.
 

Orius

Legend
I suspect no matter what they do, there'll be a certain amount of drift over time anyway. Kind of on the order of how things drifted from early 1e to late 2e. Likely whatever the game looks like 10 years from now will probably have some differences when compared to 2014.
 

TerraDave

5ever, or until 2024
So far in the play test, that isn't true.

They have nerfed the biggest options, like adding concentration to spiritual weapon.

And buff the weakest ones, like two weapon fighting.
Oh there will be all sorts of nerfing.

But if you have the old PCs with the new nerfs how will that go? And will it be compatible?
 

Amrûnril

Adventurer
I think the big area of non-compatibility will be subclasses for 2014 5e and subclasses for the same class in 1D&D.

The 3/6/10/14 sub class features in 1D&D means 5e subclasses that can’t fit that will take non trivial modification.

But a 2014 5e class using subclasses designed for that class will play fine in the same party alongside a 1D&D class using subclasses designed for it.

Class-subclass mixes could have also have issues if subclass-based features from the 2014 rules become class-based in the 2024 rules (or vice-versa). A Cleric built with the 2024 PHB and a subclass from Xanathar's, for instance could have both heavy armor training and bonus cantrip damage, while a Cleric built with the 2014 PHB and a subclass from a post-2024 supplement would have neither.

Still, I think this sort of issue should be easy to resolve as long as the players are aware of it. And if mixing 2014 and 2024 content never required adjustments, I wouldn't consider that a backwards compatible version of the game. I'd consider it the same version of the game.
 

Osgood

Adventurer
I think it all depends on how you define compatibility. If you expect yo be able to use every feat, subclass, and other player from 5E, I'd guess no. But I'm thinking most things a DM uses, magic items, monsters, and adventures will need little to no effort to use. Since the underlying math and terminology is the same, it should all work together fairly well.

I suspect most of the changes will be on the character building side, with the expectation that you can play any adventure with characters built under either ruleset--but you won't really mix and match when making characters due to the differences in how feats are built, the levels subclass abilities come up, etc.
 

Clint_L

Hero
They already acknowledged in their announcement for One that the game will continue to evolve. But they explicitly rejected the old editions paradigm where you needed to buy all new books at once. They'll just release updated versions over time, and when you feel like getting the new version, it'll be there. For new players it'll be the only option, so the game will gradually change, yet at no point will existing content become obsolete over night.

What this will look like on DDB is that, as a new version of a book comes out, the old one becomes legacy content that you can still access if you prefer, or if you haven't purchased the new thing. But once you purchase the new book, it'll become the default version unless/until you stipulate otherwise. And the legacy content won't be available in the DDB marketplace, so over time the new version will dominate.

The evolution analogy is quite apt.
 

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