Core Rule Books Only - What system would you play?


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The same system that's my favorite anyway, 3E.

I would think that peoples preferences of systems would probably be predicated upon their enjoyment of the systems core. I think that would probably mean peoples favorite systems wouldn't change if limited to only core books.

Actually, this isn't true for me. While I enjoy 4E, I'd never want to play it under the restrictions I provided above. I feel the same about the WoD books. Mage, Werewolf, Vampire all add a lot to the setting and game.
 


Pathfinder. (Setting: Golarion.)

Runner-Up: Mutants & Masterminds. (Setting: Freedom City.)

Second Runner-Up: Shadowrun 4E. (Setting: Seattle 2072.)
 

I would play D&D 4e or GURPS 4e. I rarely use supplements in D&D 4e, as I feel the game works quite respectably with just the first three books. GURPS 4e is an incredible system right out of the box if you're a creative person.
 

Assuming no home brewed material, my list includes:
Mutants and Masterminds 2e
GURPS 3e or 4e
Champions/ Hero System 4e
d20 Modern (w/o the fx rules)

Edit: D&D 3e is my favorite edition, but I need Unearthed Arcana and some third party company material to want to run or play it.
 


Definitely something point based. Mutants and Masterminds being my favorite point based system, I'll pick that.

But rather than PHB/DMG (since the Mastermind's Manual is more of just alternate rules), I'd go 2E core book + Ultimate Power.
 

I played most roleplaying games when they were fresh in their first edition: old Runequest, Pendragon, Arms Law and Spell Law (before they became Rolemaster), Dragon Quest, Powers and Perils, Call of Cthulhu, Werewolf, Warhammer, Advanced Dungeons and Dragons, so I have plenty of experience playing with core rules only.

However, in most cases I always prefer using added material if the game is good. The only game I would enjoy playing stripped to its basics more than complete would be original Pendragon. Original Pendragon was just knights errants: no races, no casters, no rogues. That and its faithful recreation of Arthurian legend made it unique and the best roleplaying game in the history of mankind.

But nowadays I prefer 4th edition where everything is core.
 

Pretty much anything. I don't play D&D much, and the games I do play we don't tend to be very suppliment heavy. We have 5-6 books we use in my Hunter game, and its already annoying me with rules spread too far out. But they're so awesome! :)
 

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