You are correct, but I'm not sure it's commonly perceived that way, and perceptions matter among gamers. Because the oD&D/AD&D rules were slapdash, they welcomed your own coat of paint or renovations as being just as valid or moreso than the official take, because we all knew that the Emperor didn't have clothes, and there was less codified overall. Now that he does, and he's covering almost all bases, there's less invitation (or need) to houserule, and less house-ruling pretty much by definition means less creativity because more gets left static.So 3e is in fact just as versatile as earlier editions and in fact all rulesets, but can be modified while more easily maintaing balance because that baseline is in place.
Note that this criticism was levelled at AD&D back in the day for it's encouragement of hand-holding and concept of "official", relative to it's even more slapdash predecessor. To look at the Rules forum in a skewed light, 3E encourages hand-holding to an order of magnitude more than AD&D ever did. Is that bad? No...and yes. Gamers get the solid foundation and baseline. The other side of the blade is that they may be less inclined to deviate from that baseline, which is also a good thing, and a bad thing, rolled into one....depending on how you view it, your gaming style, blah blah blah...
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