Joshua Dyal said:I'd just like to point out that my beard, when I deign to grow it, comes in quite grey, and I hated 1e with a passion.
My beard is also quite gray. I loved 1e, but bailed after 2e came out.
Joshua Dyal said:I'd just like to point out that my beard, when I deign to grow it, comes in quite grey, and I hated 1e with a passion.
Storm Raven said:Except that all of your arguments concerning the flavor of 1e are driven by the unbalanced nature of the rule set. I'm not making this stuff up, I'm merely pointing out the natural conclusions one must draw based upon what you have said.
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Storm Raven said:...
I know what you have said about your experience. That's enough to draw conclusions...
Storm Raven said:Apparently not, since the "flavor based" arguments you make later in the exact same post go back to the mechanical issues related to CR. You don't even understand what your arguments are at this point....
Storm Raven said:Complainint about dungeonpunk art is minor, so minor that it is trivial and silly to do so. I did.
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Storm Raven said:... Caveats that you don't seem to be able to connect the dots between....
Storm Raven said:...
You mean, my experience with the "old school" elements of the system based upon actual game play in recent years, possession of the actual books and adventures in question, and the perspective of having played the system at two different points in my life? You can look back through rose-colored glasses all you want about 1e, but it doesn't change the fact that what you are remembering isn't the system as it was. Based on your comments and assertions concerning what you regard as "old school", you are remembering the system as you think it was pumped up with nostalgia...
Storm Raven said:Your "perspective" is flawed by the fact that your factual basis is wanting. You state that "3e is different from 1e in this regard", when it isn't. ....
That's the hazard of being in the minority.Aldarc said:I think it is primarily a fear on my part on the amount of supported material that a 3rd Party Publisher can provide for their game system vs. the amount of material that WotC can dish out.
Kain Forestwalker said:Ok, I'm kinda new here so, please don't rip me a new one.
I'll try my hand; I work in market research (where do you think the wings on my avatar come from?Crothian said:I'm not doubting it, what I'm doubting is that unless you are forcing people to participate in a poll, aren't all polls voluntary? Even if as in a random sample you are asking a computer list of random people, they still have the choice of participating. So, if only opinionated people are going to answer an on line poll open to all, why does a random sample poll not have that same problem?
And there are greybeards like me, who still like to run/play 1e and B/X, but DO NOT run games like we did in middle school. If you were to go to my private message board and read the PBP stuff, I don't think you'd be able to tell the in character dialog for the 1e game from the 3e game. From a plot and flavor perspective, my current 1e game has more in common with the 3e game I was running 2 years ago than my 15th fighter slogging thrugh B2 back in 1983.nothing to see here said:Most of the people I know who enjoy 3e enjoy the game in a different manner than how they first enjoyed playing roleplaying games...as they've matured, the way they enjoy their hobby has matured. For others -- it seems they want the game to replicate the feel of being 12 years old and sitting around a comfortable basement rolling some dice with some buddies on a lazy saturday afternoon. That's a tall order for any set of rules.
Qlippoth said:But (if I may at last approach your question), yes, all polls (except those administered at gunpoint) have that same problem. The issue here is one of methodology: a sample is not random if the pollster isn't choosing who gets asked the question.