I think you’re wrong here. Players aren’t going to not use Tasha’s just because the phb got an updoot.are factoring it in, but I really think the WotC (and me as well), thinks that most groups aren't going to play with both at once. That is just not the way most 5e players play the game.
That has been the pattern, and I expect the majority of folks will (eventually) go with the new books. I won't of course, but my way is very much not the way of the majority.I think that by, say, 2026, any confusion will likely fade into the background as the community adopts the newer revision books over time.
That was my experience of 3.x: never really purely 3E or 3.5I think you’re wrong here. Players aren’t going to not use Tasha’s just because the phb got an updoot.
They’re gonna use both exactly because they don’t think too hard about it.
Except it's not, because for D&D the word "edition" has previously meant a substantially new, mostly non-backwards compatible version of the game, and that's not what you are getting this time.I'm sorry, but having an edition number immediately tells you what you get. Just having a new PHB with the same classes but different from the other PHB that also contains the same classes is way more confusing than something that says "Oh, this is from a different edition". Like, one way or another you're going to have to denote the difference between the old and the new. If not an edition number, it'll be a picture, a color, something. At least with an edition number it's up front about what you are getting.
The blurb on the back of the 2024 books will likely say "revised fifth edition" or something to that effect, just like the current rulebooks only say "fifth edition" in the blurb on the back of the book. Otherwise, Crawford has said that they will refer to them as PHB (2014) vs PHB (2024).
How much confusion has not having "fifth edition" on the front of the 2014 books actually caused? How much confusion was caused by the original D&D, Holmes, B/X, and BECMI all having the same names? I really think the confusion argument is greatly exaggerated.
Except it's not, because for D&D the word "edition" has previously meant a substantially new, mostly non-backwards compatible version of the game, and that's not what you are getting this time.
That's the problem. Yeah, if these were regular books the word "edition" would be fine. But TSR poisoned that well.
As Crawford pointed out.
Yeah man the more causal players I knew brought things from 3/.5 to thier 4e games, and they were actual different games.That was my experience of 3.x: never really purely 3E or 3.5
or we just think it is a lot less messy than you make it out to be.I feel like the people haggling over the exact definition of "editions" is missing what people like @Emberashh and I are really pointing to: the fact that you have a second, older PHB out in the wild that is useable is just a messy thing.
this will get sorted out, and if some tables keep using the non-nerfed options, that isn’t really a problem either. They have been using that option for several years now, without much complaining.The whole point to revising something is to replace it, but we're not really getting a replacement as much as they are creating a rival and hoping it supersedes the original. And I think that's likely for a lot of classes... but if they want to do some needed nerfs to certain classes and builds, I think it becomes much harder when you are giving players an exit to go and just continue to use the old ones.
I remember reading that before, but I can't find a source. Some interview with Zeb Cook maybe?I'm pretty sure that is not the case. AD&D 2E isn't that different than AD&D 1E, and there is no difference in the branding. I've certainly never heard that claim before.
You're not obligated, but . . . I'm going to need a source to believe that one.