While I commend your attitude, aren't you a bit naive?If you enjoy 5e but you’re done with Hasbro or WOTC or the D&D brand, this message is for you.
5e isn’t D&D.
I don't think that having such a preference suggests that you don't actually play the game.I suspect that in the Venn diagram of those that profess considerable angst over nomenclature and those that do not actually play dnd overlap considerably.
But how do you tell if someone is a True Scotsman?I suspect that in the Venn diagram of those that profess considerable angst over nomenclature and those that do not actually play dnd overlap considerably.
Easily: if it's nae Scottish, it's crrrrap!But how do you tell if someone is a True Scotsman?
I'm planning to still call it D&D 2024. Close enough not to matter unlike calling it 5.5 which doesn't make any sense since there are now many core 5e games and more to come.I've been out of it for a minute, but since @SlyFlourish and other's preferred nomenclature for the upcoming release is "D&D 2024," is that changed now that the revision is spread out across 2024-25? Do we keep calling it 2024 when other supplements are released in 2026, etc.? Like are we going to keep referring to it with a date in the past so it continuously shows its age?
(Again, this is why calling it "5.5, 6e, 5e Revised" or literally anything else would've been preferable.)
I trivialize it because it's trivial. It really, really doesn't matter. Angst over what the precise name of a game is, is the definition of a trivial concern.I don't think that having such a preference suggests that you don't actually play the game.
I do think that it's rude to trivialize folks' opinions like that.
I'd prefer it if WotC distinguished the names between the 2014 and 2024 books.
I run ~5 games/week.
This hasn't been presented by SlyFlourish at all.Just to say you can hate WotCs stunts with the OGL and still play and buy the new 2024 edition of D&D, no need to mentally contort yourself into thinking "D&D isn't WotC".
I'll just call it D&D, and assume that's what the conversation is about unless otherwise specified. The vast majority of my conversations are with folks who don;t know or care about other editions.Once it's released, I'll just call it "Current Edition".
Is it really trivializing to stoop to accusing people who care about it aren't real D&D players?I trivialize it because it's trivial. It really, really doesn't matter. Angst over what the precise name of a game is, is the definition of a trivial concern.