My point isn't that people shouldn't liek what they like, but rather they should play the game they like rather than constantly complaining that the current game isn't the old game. Just play what you like.
This thread was inspired by a poster literally saying that they would give the current game a try if only it used the old art. Literally used the old art.
That is what is exhausting. Just play 2E or whatever.
I think that might have been me, so I feel I should comment. Mostly I said art because when it is simply the rules, well you can fix rules with your own imagination or ingenuity... no biggie. But the art, the physical pictures staring you down from the pages or the monitor, are mostly inescapable. So even if you want to "pretend something else", you can't, because it is right there every time.
For some perspective. I've always loved D&D, though I never really got to play as much as I wanted till 5e... having kids who are old enough to play and like what you like is rather awesome. I've played plenty of video games around the "D&D style" over the years. RPG or fantasy video games with tactical battles are great.
But I have touched just about every iteration of D&D as a TTRPG, except 4e (was busy having kids)... and I would love to play 4e one day anyway. I can see a lot of cool options in there... tactical battles are probably my favorite part of D&D just like it is my favorite part of video games. My second favorite part? Well that'd be the art and the "feel" of it all.
Art? So yeah, I get very hung up on the art. Not all the old 1e or 2e art was perfect in my eyes, far from it. Every edition has some great stuff, truly. But what I personally cannot handle is putting a modern feel or a scifi feel into D&D. I can't do Eberron, I can't do Spelljammer... it just doesn't work for me. When I heard about the secret scifi part of BECMI, I immediately told myself "nope, not in my world". If I can hide from it, great. But the art in the core rules books are right there, in your face, and you can't hide from it. I would no longer be able to pretend if I'm staring down the barrel of a digital paint/CGIesque/computery guy dressed like someone from our modern age in a D&D book, because it's slapping me in the face every time I turn the page.
So yeah, if 2024 books had an alternate art version, I'd be much more inclined to buy them just to have them. I'm fine right now with 5e with some 3.5e + 2024house-rules thrown in, but one day I'd like to try 2024 vanilla. I own the monster manual 2024/2025, because I gotta have every version of it... but the rest, nah, I don't need it right now. If it felt like a more medieval world, then I'd be more interested.