Kurotowa
Legend
Indeed. What I said about times when "the market leader destroys themselves in a pyre of self-sabotage"? That's what nearly happened with 4e. Pathfinder wouldn't have gotten a faction of the market share they still hold if 4e wasn't alienating so much of D&D's audience at the time.The consistency of their product schedule, and the sales numbers, indicate that theybare servicing their market. Idlf they weren't, we would see a radical shift and shake-up as when 3E, 3.5 or 4E failed to do so.
You can feel that 5e threw out the baby with the bathwater when reversing course from 4e. You can be one of those people who genuinely preferred 4e and still resent its renunciation. But there's no denying that 4e left D&D vulnerable to a competitor in a way it never had been before, and that 5e rather dramatically changed the picture. The one sin you can't accuse 5e of is not being the most popular edition of D&D ever.