WayneLigon said:
Without paying attention to and understanding the underlying math of the entire thing, though, you run a very real risk of creating huge numbers of unintended loopholes that could ruin the game. It's only recently that people have paid attention to such things, and it's generally resulted in better products that are harder for the rules-lawyers to pick apart and use as weapons against a GM.
But the first page of the 3E PHB points out Rule 0. So rules-lawyering, and picking stuff apart to use against the DM only works if the DM lets it.
I've had to flatten players before, when they tried to abuse a loophole. It was a simple matter of insisting on logic and I guess "reasonable-fit" for the situation, rather than using the rules as written.
Obviously the math is important, but something I've been very dissatisfied with is that the game is beginning to feel "over-designed" to me. Looking at several prestige classes, for instance, as well as certain spells etc., I feel that they've been "tightened" too much in 3E.....so much so that we either have to house rule to ignore the core rules, or just leave that stuff out because it's too "engineered" and as a result just feels bland.
I don't know how else to describe it. Maybe a good analogy would be cars. Toyota's a popular brand. I've test driven them before, but never bought them, because, to me, they feel bland. In the drive to make everything smooth, and well-engineered, and reduce cabin noise, I find to me, that it feels like I'm not really driving a car anymore. I can't "feel" it. So, I drive a Mustang, and a Fusion. Personally, I find both more exciting to drive. From a technical perspective, maybe they're inferior cars. But I "feel" them in a way that I don't with any of the Toyotas or Infinitis I've tried.
I've been starting to feel that way about 3E....almost that it's getting *so* refined that it's kind of sucking the life out of it. I used to love collecting and reading my rulebooks in 1st and 2nd Ed. There was tonnes of cool stuff. Reading many of my 3E texts, with the exception of a few, has at times put me to sleep. Far too dry, too technical, and too "flat". I'm a little concerned that the trend will get worse in 4E....but I'm willing to wait and see. And maybe I'll get lucky, and find that my concerns are baseless, and 4E is more exciting to read.
Until then, all we can do is discuss, and I don't think there's anything wrong with dissenting viewpoints. These are *discussion* boards, afterall
Banshee