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General Tabletop Discussion
D&D Older Editions
2e, the most lethal edition?
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<blockquote data-quote="DND_Reborn" data-source="post: 7636579" data-attributes="member: 6987520"><p>Even if you believe 2E was the most lethal edition, how many people remember more of their characters <em>dying </em>in 1E?</p><p></p><p>I know I had more character deaths in 1E than 2E, by a long shot. Since I played with mostly the same people over all those years between both editions I will rule that factor out.</p><p></p><p>And while things like having a default 3d6 for ability scores in 2E, I can't recall many players ever <em>really </em>using it unless they wanted the randomness and challenge. True, dragons could be much more deadly, but in 1E lower level characters could handle dragons with some chance of success, in 2E all it did was make it so characters had to be higher levels to handle them. The degree of danger remained the same IMO, just when you challenged them was different.</p><p></p><p>Those were my experiences, anyway.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DND_Reborn, post: 7636579, member: 6987520"] Even if you believe 2E was the most lethal edition, how many people remember more of their characters [I]dying [/I]in 1E? I know I had more character deaths in 1E than 2E, by a long shot. Since I played with mostly the same people over all those years between both editions I will rule that factor out. And while things like having a default 3d6 for ability scores in 2E, I can't recall many players ever [I]really [/I]using it unless they wanted the randomness and challenge. True, dragons could be much more deadly, but in 1E lower level characters could handle dragons with some chance of success, in 2E all it did was make it so characters had to be higher levels to handle them. The degree of danger remained the same IMO, just when you challenged them was different. Those were my experiences, anyway. [/QUOTE]
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2e, the most lethal edition?
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