Clint_L
Legend
This is certainly one way of spinning that process. I disagree with that interpretation of how 5e was developed.1) the Next playtest was essentially aborted because they ran out of time and WotC then mostly did what they wanted, untested (by the playtest)
How many things are in the game? And how many resulted in that low score? Given the scale of the project, only a few things scoring low would be an extremely impressive accomplishment. And WotC has since continued to iterate on 5e - it's not like they walked away from it in 2014. Most folks seem to feel that Xanathar's and Tasha's improved the ranger class tremendously.2) look at the satisfaction ratings in the slide that was posted, a class being in the 20s is not a sign that a process that should result in 70% approval is working
Okay, and your perspective is based on what expertise in conducting and analyzing surveys? Why is your perspective supposed to mean more to me than the perspective of the professionals designing, conducting, and analyzing these surveys?3) the methodology from my perspective is full of holes, and if the only way WotC knows what my rating actually means is me writing an explanation, then the whole thing is reading tea leaves because most people don’t do that
Sales that greatly exceed all projections, as 5e's have done, are always going to lead a corporation to believe that their process is generally working. Your attempt to invoke the argument from absence is very flawed - I am arguing based on something that did happen (sales vs. projections, which are objectively measurable), not something that did not. It is true that I can only show correlation, not causation, but I acknowledged that up front. However, this is typical when analyzing sales trends, and the correlation is very suggestive.None of these are signs of doing a good job with it
ha, the argument from the result backwards that I used a few posts up.
My talisman against bear attacks must be working, because I was never attacked by a bear.
No, sales can be great despite the surveys doing a poor job, to me that is what we are seeing
This is just incorrect. A great deal of research shows conclusively that human beings recall negative events much more easily than positive ones. I invite you to Google it.no we don’t, that is why there is such a thing as the good old times
For example, above you cite a few instances of low-scoring results, while ignoring the hundreds of high-scoring ones.
What does that even mean? "Good" and "bad" are meaningless terms outside of context.no, but there is good or bad
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