That's a bunch of bullcrap right there......but associating this thread to that movie is udderly ridiculous.![]()

That's a bunch of bullcrap right there......but associating this thread to that movie is udderly ridiculous.![]()
See, that’s precisely the problem. You seem to think those tables of names are a waste. I don’t.Lots of 3PP sell books of random names and stuff, too. Why should WotC "waste" pages on that and not Domain Management?
I appreciate a good Kung Pao Enter the Fist meme as anyone but associating this thread to that movie is udderly ridiculous.![]()
My current group started out as 5e only. We have since played Blades in the Dark, Stars without Number, Lancer, Old gods of Appalachia and even one guys homebrew RPG. That said most of those only lasted a few sessions. But we do occasionally cycle back to them for a few more. Probably 90% of our time is spent on 5e.
I’d say if it wasn’t for 5e those 4-5 other boats wouldn’t have been lifted by my group either. I’m sure I’m far from the only one.
I am not seeing any evidence to the contrary either however… the premise certainly makes more sense than the alternative to me. If you have no one attracting players, how does that benefit anyone?
I can certainly see a case that once attracted to TTRPGs some people will branch out from the game they started with. I know I did
Conversely there's no evidence significantly more people would play TTRPGs if there were no D&D.
When I visit Drivethru I see a lot of non-D&D content. It would be interesting to see sales figures for all those, but I am guessing it's not insignificant. 5% of 100 is only 5, but 5% of a million is 50,000. The larger the player base D&D creates, the larger the pool of players who might be interested in trying something else.
None of us individually know or will ever know. That's correct and exactly the point.
Which means that yeah... the question of "Is the dominance of D&D good or bad?" has no articulated answer with regards to players playing other games. So really... it's an unnecessary question to ask, and an even more unnecessary question to bother wasting our time trying to answer. Because none of us know the true answer... all we know is what the answer is for us. But that doesn't help anyone else.
Because you only need one book of names, and it doesn't even need to be system-specific. Anyone could make it, for relatively little effort and virtually no design sweat.See, that’s precisely the problem. You seem to think those tables of names are a waste. I don’t.
Why should your preference for “Domain Management” rules trump my preference for a list of tables I can use to pull random names from when the party meets an NPC?