the function is for saying what you are playing... clearity.I don't care whether it is called a new edition or not. It is a marketing distinction, not a functional one.
the function is for saying what you are playing... clearity.
Imagine if you took the "edition number" off every edition then found out there are 120 D&D games running over the course of this long weekend at a con. You have a version of the game you want to play (lets say the version that was the most resent in 2007) how do you detriment how many of those games fit that?
lets say half those games are modern games (so 5e including tashas and MotM) (60) and half of what is left is base 5e without the updates (30) and of what is left some (5) are 4e, some are 3.5 (5), and the rest are all TSR editions (20)... without edition how do you silio those?
What if they just call it 5e 2024?If tomorrow WOTC came out with an announcement that said "One DND will be officially called Sixth Edition Dungeons and Dragons and that the rules will be backwards compatible with fifth edition adventures and supplements."
What changes?
About the playtest?
About the products you would buy?
The games and campaigns you would run?
What if they just call it Mauve?What if they just call it 5e 2024?
I don't understand what you mean.Sounds like business as usual...![]()
he means that he has to ask every game at every con "are you useing Thac0" and has since 1989I don't understand what you mean.