Upper_Krust
Legend
Hey crazy_cat! 
When is more complex 'better' though? If the number of 'moving parts' in 3rd Edition is slowing down the creative process and shrinking the time spent actually 'playing' then you have to ask whats going wrong.
Are people who already use miniatures (or counters) and battlemats (or dungeon tiles) in their game not playing 'D&D'?
But what if they like the taste of Coca-Cola, but don't want the sugar fattening them up?
Can people not have the option of a simplified version of the rules, D&D 'Lite' if you will.
Has the D&D Boardgame killed D&D...no.
Did the Basic game kill it...no.
Can a pen & paper version of 4th Edition be a success...no, because there is no great incentive for merely more of the same, but tweaked. How the heck can you sell a 4th Ed. Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting book? The 3rd Edition book is 90% fluff as it is!
Therefore either Wizards of the Coast do something different, or they shut up shop. Its as simple as that.

crazy_cat said:I think that trying to grow D&D as a game by dumbing down the rules and adding more visual and physical props to what is at heart (and always has been) a quite complex game of imagination is to mis-market the game.
When is more complex 'better' though? If the number of 'moving parts' in 3rd Edition is slowing down the creative process and shrinking the time spent actually 'playing' then you have to ask whats going wrong.
Are people who already use miniatures (or counters) and battlemats (or dungeon tiles) in their game not playing 'D&D'?
crazy_cat said:If people want to play a simpler board or card based game then they can.
But what if they like the taste of Coca-Cola, but don't want the sugar fattening them up?
Can people not have the option of a simplified version of the rules, D&D 'Lite' if you will.
crazy_cat said:To re-invent and re-brand D&D as this game for everybody is I suspect a fairly surefire way to alienate most of the existing players (and hence the market) for no actual assurance that anybody else will actually like the new hybrid game you've invented.
Big gamble for WOTC - if it works they make lots of cash, but its a big if - losing the existing players and sales and not replacing them, let alone expanding upon them, basically kills D&D.
I call that outcome a bad thing, and I suspect most at WOTC would to.
Has the D&D Boardgame killed D&D...no.
Did the Basic game kill it...no.
Can a pen & paper version of 4th Edition be a success...no, because there is no great incentive for merely more of the same, but tweaked. How the heck can you sell a 4th Ed. Forgotten Realms Campaign Setting book? The 3rd Edition book is 90% fluff as it is!
Therefore either Wizards of the Coast do something different, or they shut up shop. Its as simple as that.