delericho
Legend
As noted by others, that arrangement of the planes long predated Planescape.
As AD&D lore, I could happily take it or leave it.
As Planescape lore... I don't really care. I never got into PS. If WotC were to republish the setting, though, they should stick with the existing lore, because that is the appropriate lore for that setting.
My objection to the 4e lore wasn't that they changed it, it was that there was a fairly strong stance that this is how it is coupled with and it's different. Especially when that led to changes being made to Forgotten Realms and to Eberron to make them compliant with the new order. Had they instead presented the new cosmology as merely an example (or, more importantly, simply not changed other settings), then I would have been fine with that.
With 5e, I'm hoping they'll stay away from locking down the lore any more than they have to. They're on a good path with the deities, IMO, by presenting them as archetypes rather than as specific beings. However, I do occasionally get concerned, usually when reading the articles about monster design, where every so often there seems to be a move to declaring "the D&D goblin" or "the D&D dragon", or whatever, especially if their chosen version is different from what has gone before.
As AD&D lore, I could happily take it or leave it.
As Planescape lore... I don't really care. I never got into PS. If WotC were to republish the setting, though, they should stick with the existing lore, because that is the appropriate lore for that setting.
My objection to the 4e lore wasn't that they changed it, it was that there was a fairly strong stance that this is how it is coupled with and it's different. Especially when that led to changes being made to Forgotten Realms and to Eberron to make them compliant with the new order. Had they instead presented the new cosmology as merely an example (or, more importantly, simply not changed other settings), then I would have been fine with that.
With 5e, I'm hoping they'll stay away from locking down the lore any more than they have to. They're on a good path with the deities, IMO, by presenting them as archetypes rather than as specific beings. However, I do occasionally get concerned, usually when reading the articles about monster design, where every so often there seems to be a move to declaring "the D&D goblin" or "the D&D dragon", or whatever, especially if their chosen version is different from what has gone before.