d20Dwarf
Explorer
The_Universe said:If Alias can do it, why not Spycraft?![]()
Because Alias did it well!

J.J...*does the "call me" gesture*
The_Universe said:If Alias can do it, why not Spycraft?![]()
d20Dwarf said:Seriously, my beef in this thread has never been about personal comments, so don't sweep me up in GMS's discussion. I'm focused only on incorrect criticisms of the works themselves. I have no problem with legitimate criticisms...I think I've been more than willing to discuss problems with books I've worked on without getting offended. But that doesn't mean I'm going to always agree, or watch a product, any product, get bashed for irrational reasons.![]()
BelenUmeria said:I was just naming a few designers that I respected rather than associating you with anything said in this thread.
Actually, his position is quite clear on the more-than-casual "fans" -- they're bad for the industry, because their willingness to buy crap sight unseen means that more crap is published than would otherwise be the case, and this crap services a market which is ever-shrinking by definition (since the crap drives away all but the hardcore). If there were fewer of these "fans" then products would have to sink or swim on merit. He's already expressed this position in this thread, and I agree with Eyebeams on it. I don't agree with his position on expectation though, and particularly where a legacy brand like GW is concerned (notwithstanding that I personally liked GWd20).GVDammerung said:Your position does not take into consideration what being a more than casual "fan" means. A fan follows their setting through good times and bad, like a baseball fan perhaps does as well, still buying tickets when you know you are out of the pennant race or were never in it.
mhacdebhandia said:Shadowforce Archer. When you've crafted a fun, playable spy game, I fail to see why you would decide to make a third-grade "secret supernatural" setting the official baseline of the game.
GVDammerung said:Your experiences are, obviously, your own and I cannot pass judgment on them in any particular.
You assume, however, that your experiences are normative. That does not necessarily follow.
GVDammerung said:Your description is so strained to make your "point" that you make writing for a publisher sound like confinement within a Dickensian workhouse.
What GMSkarka said.GMSkarka said:...Besides which, you'd be hard pressed to defend "it's crap" or "YUCK!" or "abomination" as a reasonable criticism.
i loved brussels sprouts as a 4-year-old. i love them still.tonym said:Therefore, saying "Yuck!" to a book is like calling the book "a brussel sprout in the mouth of a 4-year-old." Which is much like calling the writer a torturer of small children.
My 2 cp.
Tony M
Brussel Sprout AND OD&D? Wow. You are quite the strange fellow. (And I mean that in the best way possible)diaglo said:i loved brussels sprouts as a 4-year-old. i love them still.![]()
diaglo said:i loved brussels sprouts as a 4-year-old. i love them still.![]()