Making a math mistake isn’t a transparency issue though. It’s simply a math mistake. Stupid mistake, sure. But again, that doesn’t really counter what I’m saying.
WotC was being as clear and open about what they were trying to do as they could be. They were straight up saying that they thought x was a better idea than y. There was very little burying the lede going on.
And that openness got them crucified. No matter what they said, people pulled single points (don’t talk to gate guards, cloud watching - for example) and just went to town.
To the point where ten years later, people are STILL misquoting stuff and grinding those same stones.
When is the last time anyone from WotC said anything publicly that wasn’t vetted through marketing? They used to do it all the time. Hell there were WotC people who posted regularly here on En World.
Now? Everything is kept very much at a remove. Zero direct interaction. Yup we’ve got these great playtests where they chuck out new ideas, the fandom rejects them and we get to keep on going on.
We got the DnD that we demanded.