doctorbadwolf
Heretic of The Seventh Circle
Whereas if a player gets Tasha’s before I do, I only need to read their character once made to see what it’s strengths and weaknesses are in order to better run a fun and challenging game, same as if I ran a PHB only game. I don’t need to check for balance, because nothing they’ve printed so far has been outside the phb balance, and the PHB is much narrower than folks act like it is.IT isn't just them wanting broken stuff (but look at my screen name i know people who that is true for) it's Ross wanting a new cool warlock pact, and Jim wanting the werewolf class from this, and kurt wanting just these two feats from these two books.... it adds up
They literally are, they’ll just be revised versions.The reality is, WotC are not going to continue to print the PHB/DMG/MM after 2024 in physical form.
The 2014 core books are not the exclusive entirety of 5e D&D. New revised versions will still be 5e. This whole line of thought relies on bunk premises.As @darjr pointed out, realistically, there will still be plenty on the shelves for quite a while, and even after that, used ones will likely be extremely cheap, but pretending WotC are going to keep publishing them, even though would make no sense whatsoever, and they haven't said they would, just because, technically have definitely said they would is absolutely ludicrous behaviour.
That is false. Anyone reading the thread can see very easily that it is false.Literally the only other thing people are criticising KP for is implying their version will be closer than WotC's version.
No.
With respect, it's an opinion.
You don't have to agree with it, but it's not "dishonest" by any legitimate use of the term:
M-W defines "dishonest" thusly (and I don't prefer M-W but at least they're easy to find lol)
1
obsolete : SHAMEFUL, UNCHASTE
2
: characterized by lack of truth, honesty, or trustworthiness : UNFAIR, DECEPTIVE
Actually fascinated because I didn't know the obsolete meaning!
But unless you regard all marketing and opinion as "lacking in trustworthiness", which y'know, fair if you do, I don't think there's anything particularly egregious about KP's statement. And if you do regard marketing that way, then the entire D&D Direct we just have from WotC should be characterized as "dishonest".
It is wrong, but it’s also not what they said.And as I keep saying, the "our version will be closer!" is just opinion/marketing. Is it kind of funny? Yeah a little bit. But it's not "wrong" or something,
1. 5th Edition Core Rulebooks are going away.The 5E Monster Manual, Player’s Handbook, and Dungeon Master’s Guide will not stay in print. New players must either use purely digital rulebooks (which works for some people) or find a new version.
That isn’t just marketing or opinion, it is a communication presented as statements of fact that are not accurate, and indeed are inaccurate in ways that we can and should expect them to know are innacurate. That’s dishonest.
We aim to keep the spirit of tabletop alive by producing beautiful, inviting versions of the core rulebooks for those who prefer to play face-to-face and those who don’t want to pay a monthly subscription to play.
Also positions them rhetorically as the saviors of tabletop roleplaying, which is insanely arrogant, and relies upon fear-mongering sourced in, at best, debunked rumors and “reporting” from known liars.
We want to keep 5E vibrant and strong at the heart of a community of players and publishers. Your investment in 5E will be supported by Project Black Flag because it is compatible with the game you already know.”
This is a disingenuous query. It is extremely clear that they are saying no such thing, and that you are twisting their words and using pedantry to target the way the talk rather than the substance of their statements.I mean, by that logic, all marketing and opinion of any kind on an unfinished product is "unfair and deceptive", then, isn't it?
So you’re…literally just nitpicking. What purpose do you think this behavior serves?If you said "distasteful", I wouldn't really argue, to be honest. I don't agree but that's literally a matter of taste.
"Dishonest" is what I have a problem with, because it invokes a much stronger notion that there's something fundamentally incorrect, and I don't think anyone has demonstrated that. Calling it a "dark road" is also ludicrously dramatic I would personally suggest.
Yes, it does.??? That doesn't make any sense in English in the context
You’re quite clear, and are being pretty egregiously gaslit, talked down to for no reason, and generally snarked at way beyond what could ever be called appropriate.I'm I really not being clear here or just being gaslighted?
Right, and the idea that wotc is abandoning 5e by revising it a bit, while KP is “keeping it alive” by…revising it a bit, is dishonest. It is misleading, indicating a dynamic that isn’t extant from any evidence available to us, and relies on viewing “5e” as only the 2014 core book set in one part, but defining it much more loosely in another, in order to paint themselves as the saviors of 5e D&D.I knwo this wasn't directed at me, but I think I have a pretty fair answer...
IF 1D&D is just a slight variation but still 5e, then so is black flagg
if 1D&D is enough of a change to be a new half (0.5) edition, then so is black flagg
if 1 D&D is enough of a change to be a new edition (6e) then so is black flagg
again this is based on what we have seen... they seem to be changing the same amount of things. So you MIGHT hit any of those 3 conclusions and be pretty fair.
the unfair reading is "1 D&D is enough of a change to be a full or half edition change but Black flagg isn't"
Your apperently interpretation of the definition you snidely posted (dictionary quoting, really?) indicated that the statement needs be incorrect in order to be dishonest. They are saying that this is incorrect. It’s not remotely a confusing statement.This is unclear:
I literally don't know what that means. Indeed, if you're merely incorrect, you're not being dishonest - you need mens rea - i.e. to knowingly mislead - to be dishonest.
No, they’re right.Re: prognostication you're being extremely clear - you're just incorrect to assert it's not prognostication.
Wotc material is vastly better balanced, and its playtesting isn’t remotely “dubious”, you just dislike the communication about it because they don’t break down the nitty gritty math of the results.Which still, to me, is a completely unjustified double standard. The one and only difference between the two is that you may have already read the WotC content. But if someone brings Tasha's to a table that hasn't bought it yet, there's literally nothing different between it and 3PP: both have dubious playtesting, and baseline 5e is, shall we say, erratic about power levels.
If you think 5e is erratic about power levels, I’m not sure what to even say to that. Did you ever play any D&D before 4e? Because 5e is barely less balanced than 4e, just more loosely defined, but previous editions were about as balanced as a tumbleweed that’s been run over a few times, in comparison.
There is an immense different between official 5e and any 3pp I’ve read this far, from small publications to Green Ronin and Kobold Press. I don’t have to review 5e books before letting players use them. At all. They just work. I have to rebuild KP books before use.
I mean, people still call the Hexblade and Gloomstalker “broken”, so I don’t expect to see much great balance analysis online about wotc products, but come on, this is kinda silly. It’s like people screeching that the ranger was broken in 4e and the assassin was “worthless”, when in reality the power difference was barely noticeable in play, akin to differently built members of either class.
4e had exponentially more feats than would have been reasonable. It had too many by a wider margin than most people think. It had so many feats most players I know absolutely despised even thinking about feats, much less choosing one, by the time our 4e games finally slowed down as we grudgingly checked out 5e around 2015ish. We were grateful for the character builder separating feats in such a way we could just only look at a couple dozen at most, and pretend the rest didn’t exist, especially after essentials came out.4e did have excessive amounts of feats (and powers), but not to the degree most folks think. 3e absolutely had an excess of feats, and PF continued that trend. Two thirds or more of 3e feats could be eliminated without negatively impacting the game at all. The same cannot be said of 4e, mostly because a lot of 4e feats are simply narrow-but-useful, or categories (e.g. all the dozens of armor or weapon proficiency feats.) Probably the only feat category that never justified its existence in 4e was Teamwork feats. In theory they're a great idea, in practice they're never good enough to be worth spending a feat on, and if they were they'd probably be OP.