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There is ick in all things, alas. At least D&D has a history of trying to reduce the ick instead of only ever doubling down on it.This thread makes me feel icky about D&D.
There is ick in all things, alas. At least D&D has a history of trying to reduce the ick instead of only ever doubling down on it.This thread makes me feel icky about D&D.
Me not really.
This thread kind of fortifies my belief that WOTC is either too beholden to the old guard or make up disproportionately by the old guard in both design and business that they either are unable to or afraid of new ideas become the core of D&D. But this thread proves that the D&D community is. And since now WOTC IS sensitive to community thought, they likely will change with it.
I mean.. they tried aardling. Aardling only failed because they halfheartedly did so and would not commit to the flavor.
Support them being creative and allowing them to inject new ideas into the core of 5e.What would your solution be here if you believe that the old guard is making WotC handle it wrong?
What would your solution be here if you believe that the old guard is making WotC handle it wrong?
Support them being creative and allowing them to inject new ideas into the core of 5e.
Urge them not to take the safe and easy route as the seemingly sense of security is a ruse. Few like boring. Especially those who stuck with 5e.
The flaw is in thinking that this thread, or the extremes presented as normal takes, are actually a representation of reality and the majority.
If I'm clearly in the minority, then WotC should listen to the majority. If it was completely unpalatable for me, then I'd just have to find another system.What would your solution be here if you believe that the new intake is making WotC handle it wrong?
At the moment they don't seem to be pleasing anyone.
The counterpoint to that counterpoint is that trying out new exciting changes and ideas is one of the points of an open playtest.The counter point to that is most people don't like dramatic change either.
I don't think they care about the old guard. Nor should they, we're not their primary customers.This thread kind of fortifies my belief that WOTC is either too beholden to the old guard or make up disproportionately by the old guard in both design and business that they either are unable to or afraid of new ideas become the core of D&D. But this thread proves that the D&D community is. And since now WOTC IS sensitive to community thought, they likely will change with it.
So it appears your post boils down to. Elf are immune to sleep and most charms so I use those things anymore. But I will post here when a module I running has sleep or charm.I’m saying it’s something that rarely if ever comes up in play. And considering you agreed with my point - one sleep spell months ago- and the next poster after me said their experiences mirrored mine,I’m kinda surprised about the level of push back here.
My initial point was that I wonder if WotC has learned that there is a significant number of players who don’t really care about racial mechanics when choosing a race. It would nicely explain why WotC is de-emphasizing racial mechanics.