Pitch clock...well, OK to a point. Good and bad.
Bigger bases - fine.
Banning the infield shift, and other needless rules around placement of fielders - not fine. In D&D this would be vaguely equivalent to banning the front line from forming a shield wall even though it's otherwise a perfectly valid tactic. This one seems like change for the sake of change.
Yep - which would almost certainly be a kick in the teeth for player agency were they to do so.It could also be like putting in rules to stop the 5 minute adventuring day?
The current D&D revision looks to me as if many of the changes are trying to improve the game. Some of them look as if they are succeeding, some of them look as if they really aren't, some are half-baked and could work with a few more iterations, and some of them ... I'm not sure what they are thinking. But a lot of them are attempts, with mixed success and some I'd call actual improvements.Are they changing the rules to sell more bats and balls, or to actually improve the game?
The current D&D revision looks to me like it includes changes for their own sake that don't actually improve the game. I'm not sure the revision will be an overall improvement or will make my game better.
This depends how it's done. I didn't find that 4e 5 minute short rests (as opposed to 5e one hour short rests) harmed player agency in the slightest - and they certainly reduced the 5 minute adventuring day.Yep - which would almost certainly be a kick in the teeth for player agency were they to do so.
In the Future just one and half days into the future, large stadiums would be sold out to see Jasper DM vs Oofa the barbarian, Grock the wizard, Snarf zag the ranger, and Jester the cleric. Season tickets are available. And no beer for the players after the 7th encounter.![]()
2023 MLB Rule Changes | MLB.com
A complete guide to the 2023 rule changes coming to MLB, including a pitch timer, restrictions on infield shifts, bigger bases, and more.www.mlb.com
![]()
All of your questions about the new baseball rules, answered
The 2023 Major League Baseball season brings a wave of rules changes collectively aimed at improving the game’s pace of play and increasing action on the field. The arrival of the pitch timer, restrictions on defensive shifts and bigger bases makes for one of the more ambitious adaptations to thewww.mlb.com
Looks like baseball is getting a revised edition too. I feel this is appropriate for this forum cause it shows willingness on a part of a game organization to examine itself and make adjustments to improve the game. Could WOTC learn a thing or two from the sports ball people on making changes to a beloved game?
I'll note that while MLB adopted extensive new rules, the purpose of the new rules was to make the game play more like it did 40 years ago, when there were shorter pauses between pitches and nobody played the shift. The changes in the rules were accordingly fundamentally reactionary, made to undo innovations in how the game was played.![]()
2023 MLB Rule Changes | MLB.com
A complete guide to the 2023 rule changes coming to MLB, including a pitch timer, restrictions on infield shifts, bigger bases, and more.www.mlb.com
![]()
All of your questions about the new baseball rules, answered
The 2023 Major League Baseball season brings a wave of rules changes collectively aimed at improving the game’s pace of play and increasing action on the field. The arrival of the pitch timer, restrictions on defensive shifts and bigger bases makes for one of the more ambitious adaptations to thewww.mlb.com
Looks like baseball is getting a revised edition too. I feel this is appropriate for this forum cause it shows willingness on a part of a game organization to examine itself and make adjustments to improve the game. Could WOTC learn a thing or two from the sports ball people on making changes to a beloved game?
If you put the bolded forward as a motion I'll second it in a heartbeat.I'll note that while MLB adopted extensive new rules, the purpose of the new rules was to make the game play more like it did 40 years ago, when there were shorter pauses between pitches and nobody played the shift. The changes in the rules were accordingly fundamentally reactionary, made to undo innovations in how the game was played.
So, I suspect whether you want WotC to "learn a thing or two" from MLB depends on how much you want them to push players to play the game like it was played back in 1983.
So a negative amount so huge that the number rivals the number of atoms in the observable universe?So, I suspect whether you want WotC to "learn a thing or two" from MLB depends on how much you want them to push players to play the game like it was played back in 1983.