And the next year or so of time before we have the new monster manual and new dmg made to go with the new phb.except for compatibility between 2014 and 2024
And the next year or so of time before we have the new monster manual and new dmg made to go with the new phb.except for compatibility between 2014 and 2024
well, it is the biggest improvement I am seeing (not much of a fan of the actual rule changes, too power-creepy and too magical), so maybe there is a reason layout gets mentioned a lotNever said it was, but they seemed to be the main things people cared about in the book as a whole at the time I posted in the thread, so I was wondering if "good for new players" somehow now means "good book overall". Since then a more broad look at the product has occurred.
If you're not happy with those non-layout aspects, wouldn't your general opinion of the book be affected by that?well, it is the biggest improvement I am seeing (not much of a fan of the actual rule changes, too power-creepy and too magical), so maybe there is a reason layout gets mentioned a lot
of course it is affected. What the book has going for it is better organization, better layout, mostly clearer rules (capitalized keywords, less natural language), and better quality art.If you're not happy with those non-layout aspects, wouldn't your general opinion of the book be affected by that?
I have a very similar view, but have decided not to get the new book.I don't have it yet, so I can't give it a fair review.
From all accounts, there is an awful lot of power creep, which is the opposite direction I'd like to see the game go. There are also a lot of changes that I don't think improve the game in any way, at least not for me.
I think the improvements to the martial classes are probably good in that they bring them closer to parity with casters, but will slow down play and make the game noticeably more fiddly.
I think the buffs to casters (e.g. bigger healing, some spells improved) are unnecessary and ill-conceived.
I'm definitely buying the book- I'm a dnd whore- but I am not sure how much of it I will end up using.
I've seen the "supers" complaint on social media and it's always pretty funny to me as someone who really started playing the running the game when 3.5 came out. Nothing in 4e, 5e, or 5.24e can hold a candle to the over-the-top broken power level of 3.5.
The core book doesn’t really describe what the demographics of a typical tavern are like. There are more species options in the new PHB than there were in the 2014 PHB, but the DM is under no pressure to make that set of species representative of the average population. If you want your taverns full of humans and maybe the occasional halfling vacationer or dwarf merchant, the 2024 PHB doesn't get in the way of you doing so.A lot of what I heard from the YouTube videos was less about max possible power and more about what the game (and in-game world) assume are normal functions.
One of the comments that I remember was that a tavern in D&D looks more like Mos Eisley Cantina. Aside from that, a lot of the discussion was about powers and abilities being more-easily accessible to a character or a person living inside of a world built upon 5e24's assumptions.
Ah, for me the only factor that really moves the needle is whether or not I like the rules changes, and...I don't.of course it is affected. What the book has going for it is better organization, better layout, mostly clearer rules (capitalized keywords, less natural language), and better quality art.
Whether you like the art and the rule changes is personal opinion. To me the art is mostly fine, the rules are going in the opposite direction of what I want, but not all that far (2014 already was over that line for me), so all in all I consider it a wash.
If you do not mind / like the direction I’d see it as an improvement over 2014.
Players assuming that anything in the PH is fair game (a long standing issue) is a form of pressure, the social kind. Heck, 5.0 had more verbiage than 5.5 that argued against assuming everything in the PH was freely available, and it was still an issue.The core book doesn’t really describe what the demographics of a typical tavern are like. There are more species options in the new PHB than there were in the 2014 PHB, but the DM is under no pressure to make that set of species representative of the average population. If you want your taverns full of humans and maybe the occasional halfling vacationer or dwarf merchant, the 2024 PHB doesn't get in the way of you doing so.