Corinnguard
Hero
Definitely the case with EN Publishing and Kobold Press.Possibly because the people making the business decisions in these smaller companies are also the ones making the game in many cases. Very much not the case with WotC.
Definitely the case with EN Publishing and Kobold Press.Possibly because the people making the business decisions in these smaller companies are also the ones making the game in many cases. Very much not the case with WotC.
Im a step up from this. Things like the OGL fiasco I care about becasue it effects the entire industry. Though, I dont care about books going out of print, or if they dont have the right art, or rules are not perfectly suited to me. I've lived with no D&D before and I can do it again. No biggie im not a brand type guy.I’m extremely averse to forming parasocial relationships with pretty much anything.
I couldn’t care less about whatever drama happens at WotC. If they release something I find interesting, I’ll buy it. If they don’t, I won’t. Speculation about the “future of D&D” is just wind to me.
See, that whole, "everybody is playing WotC D&D, so I should too if I ever want to play anything" doesn't affect me much, because I'm not out there looking for random games to play. If I were, the peer pressure to hop on WotC's bandwagon would be easier to understand.
I really think this is a big part of my problem (at least) with WotC. The people who make the game itself have little or no say in business decisions made by the people who run the company (very different folks), and not enough say I suspect in decisions about how the game is even designed. Small companies generally don’t work this way, which is one reason why I believe they generally make better games.Definitely the case with EN Publishing and Kobold Press.
If I lost my group and it was 5.5 or nothing, I'd probably go back to reading TTRPG products for pleasure and creative inspiration (my first love in any case).Luckily I have a core group and we play whatever. But I know if that group ever broke up
I’d have an easier time finding. 5E/5.5 game then anything else.
When your starving, even a cracker is a banquet.
I still believe Jeremy and co tried to make the best game they could, attempting to appease both corporate and fans. That's not an easy needle to thread.I really think this is a big part of my problem (at least) with WotC. The people who make the game itself have little or no say in business decisions made by the people who run the company (very different folks), and not enough say I suspect in decisions about how the game is even designed. Small companies generally don’t work this way, which is one reason why I believe they generally make better games.
Yeah, the designers a d artists I have a lot of respect for: and no matter what silly shenanigans corporate gets up to, they silly always be financially motivated by profit to hire talented people, like the new younger designers.I still believe Jeremy and co tried to make the best game they could, attempting to appease both corporate and fans. That's not an easy needle to thread.