an_idol_mind
Explorer
With all the talk of the flavor changes in 4th edition making the game not D&D anymore, I got to thinking...
Imagine a D&D game where the designers didn't include the half-orc, half-elf, or gnome as races. In fact, there are really no races at all; you are either a human with a choice of four classes, or you are one of three "demi-humans" who are classes themselves. There are no demons or devils at all. The gods themselves have been taken right out of the game, replaced with beings called immortals. The Great Wheel doesn't exist. Levels go up to 36 instead of 20, and there is no multi-classing whatsoever. You can't be a paladin unless you're a 9th-level fighter, and druids don't get a wildshape ability -- in fact, they don't exist at all unless your DM allows an option rule that gives your 9th-level cleric a chance to become a druid. The spells have no Greyhawk surnames in front of them, and the mind flayer isn't included in the core rules.
Based on how many people claim that 4th edition won't be D&D anymore, it's interesting to see how different the game that actually was Dungeons & Dragons for close to two decades is absolutely nothing like what most people consider quintessential D&D.
Imagine a D&D game where the designers didn't include the half-orc, half-elf, or gnome as races. In fact, there are really no races at all; you are either a human with a choice of four classes, or you are one of three "demi-humans" who are classes themselves. There are no demons or devils at all. The gods themselves have been taken right out of the game, replaced with beings called immortals. The Great Wheel doesn't exist. Levels go up to 36 instead of 20, and there is no multi-classing whatsoever. You can't be a paladin unless you're a 9th-level fighter, and druids don't get a wildshape ability -- in fact, they don't exist at all unless your DM allows an option rule that gives your 9th-level cleric a chance to become a druid. The spells have no Greyhawk surnames in front of them, and the mind flayer isn't included in the core rules.
Based on how many people claim that 4th edition won't be D&D anymore, it's interesting to see how different the game that actually was Dungeons & Dragons for close to two decades is absolutely nothing like what most people consider quintessential D&D.