Hussar
Legend
I think I wind up with two main issues with the whole "reset" thing.
1. It ignores/rejects all the really great stuff that has come out later on down the line. Sure, there's some bad stuff. "Gargoyles" anyone? But, there's been some fantastic stuff too. All the Paizo Greyhawk stuff - Savage Tides, Age of Worms, and a slew of Greyhawk centric or at least adjacent stuff. Artists like Anna Meyer who have done unbelievable amounts of work on the GH map project. All those years of Living Greyhawk material that has been produced. There's very much a danger of throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
2. It places the original material on a pedestal from which it becomes impossible to criticize. Much of the early material was written at a time when the social political landscape was very different. Inclusivity and whatnot weren't exactly major parts of the writing back then. And, frankly, some of it might be due for a bit of creative editing to bring it in line with current sensibilities. But, if the original material gets "carved in stone" by being the only canon in the setting that is actually canon, then it gets much, much harder to alter. IOW, canon is never a sufficient justification on its own for resisting changes.
1. It ignores/rejects all the really great stuff that has come out later on down the line. Sure, there's some bad stuff. "Gargoyles" anyone? But, there's been some fantastic stuff too. All the Paizo Greyhawk stuff - Savage Tides, Age of Worms, and a slew of Greyhawk centric or at least adjacent stuff. Artists like Anna Meyer who have done unbelievable amounts of work on the GH map project. All those years of Living Greyhawk material that has been produced. There's very much a danger of throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
2. It places the original material on a pedestal from which it becomes impossible to criticize. Much of the early material was written at a time when the social political landscape was very different. Inclusivity and whatnot weren't exactly major parts of the writing back then. And, frankly, some of it might be due for a bit of creative editing to bring it in line with current sensibilities. But, if the original material gets "carved in stone" by being the only canon in the setting that is actually canon, then it gets much, much harder to alter. IOW, canon is never a sufficient justification on its own for resisting changes.