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General Tabletop Discussion
D&D Older Editions, OSR, & D&D Variants
2e, the most lethal edition?
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<blockquote data-quote="Sacrosanct" data-source="post: 7638272" data-attributes="member: 15700"><p>Maybe. I mean, I started playing in 1981 in small town Alaska and small town Oregon. And even then, we tried to stick with what was “the standard”. We had conventions, tournaments with RPGA, and even small towns like mine had Dragon magazine where many of the articles were around standards of play. </p><p></p><p>By the very nature on how 1e was written (with contradictions within the rulebooks themselves), of course every table varied a bit. But with 2e, I noticed much less variance from table to table. I was overseas for most of the 90s in the military, and had tables move constantly. Probably played with hundreds of different people as people got deployed, returned home, etc. and 2e was for the most part very consistent in how people played it. So I think it started in 2e with much easier to interpret rules</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Sacrosanct, post: 7638272, member: 15700"] Maybe. I mean, I started playing in 1981 in small town Alaska and small town Oregon. And even then, we tried to stick with what was “the standard”. We had conventions, tournaments with RPGA, and even small towns like mine had Dragon magazine where many of the articles were around standards of play. By the very nature on how 1e was written (with contradictions within the rulebooks themselves), of course every table varied a bit. But with 2e, I noticed much less variance from table to table. I was overseas for most of the 90s in the military, and had tables move constantly. Probably played with hundreds of different people as people got deployed, returned home, etc. and 2e was for the most part very consistent in how people played it. So I think it started in 2e with much easier to interpret rules [/QUOTE]
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2e, the most lethal edition?
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