Parmandur
Book-Friend, he/him
You, sure. Other people? Maybe less so. The evidence suggests otherwise.A cost I will happily pay, every time.
You, sure. Other people? Maybe less so. The evidence suggests otherwise.A cost I will happily pay, every time.
Plenty of fans of Level Up, with far less marketing power behind it. Where's the evidence that people actually want a simpler game?You, sure. Other people? Maybe less so. The evidence suggests otherwise.
Level Up is a fan project targeted at existing fans who know what they're into. The new D&D is inded to be sold to people new to the whole concept who's knowledge of RPGs as a whole is 'i can roll dice and fight a dude', with whatever pop-culture knowledge comes prior to that. And.... Half elves kind of aren't a thing in pop culture these days, and I'd make a statement that I don't think half orcs ever wereLevel Up did both.
The evidence is in what sells. And yes, Level Up has some fans, but it's not at the scale of D&D.Plenty of fans of Level Up, with far less marketing power behind it. Where's the evidence that people actually want a simpler game?
I'd say D&D has a bit of a head start there. It's not a fair comparison.The evidence is in what sells. And yes, Level Up has some fans, but it's not at the scale of D&D.
Well no, of course it isn't, that's my point. A boutique hobbyist game aimed t the niche of people who think of 5E as being "not complex enough" isn't going to appeal to the broad audience WotC is aiming for when they try to treamline the game.I'd say D&D has a bit of a head start there. It's not a fair comparison.
The last survey I took, before this one, did ask me what edition I started with and, IIRC, what editions I have played, but not when I last played anything other than 5e.I know they do these surveys regularly, though I do not recall a recent D&D survey that asked about earlier editions, much less when the last time you played them.
What do people make of that? I'm wondering if this is coming up as part of deciding to put the earlier editions into CC or to test the waters for reprints for the 50th anniversary. On the 50th, I would imagine they have whatever they are going to release already planned, but who knows?
Neither of those options you list as undesirable is in fact undesirable.Sure. But it opens up the representation of a wider array of beings without creating a mechanical morass (which is undesirable), or limiting option to a few random yet mechanically distinct options (Half-Elves and Half-Orcs, also undesirable).
It undesirable to you, perhaps, but neither limiting the possibilities of hybridization nor creating a complex mechanical representation is desirable for WotC's business needs.Neither of those options you list as undesirable is in fact undesirable.
If you're going to make half-species (or part-species, if one wants to break it down into quarters or eights) distinctive beyond mere appearance, you've got to have mechanics for each one. And yeah, if every species can be halfers with every other species that's gonna take a lot of bespoke mechanics to do well enough to be worth bothering with.
Either that, or limit the number of inter-species possitilities while still giving each one its own mechanics.