Monstrous Menagerie II: Hordes & Heroes has a launch date! Mark your calendars for November 12th, 2024. 300+ more monsters for your D&D 2024, or Level Up: Advanced 5th Edition games, plus new horde rules and rules for heroic monsters who level up alongside you--whether they be allies, companions, or foes! Click here to follow on Kickstarter!
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly. You should upgrade or use an alternative browser.
D&D (2024)If WOTC announces that OneDnd will be called 6th edition and will be backwards compatible with fifth edition adventures and supplements What changes?
Exactly... at least in the 2e times in our home games we had to discuss if we use skills and powers, which parry rule, spell points or slots and so on... 5e/OneDnD will pale in comparison.
I PERSONALLY would respect WotC design and advertiseing teams more for being honest (cause I see this as much a new edition as 1e/2e or 3e/3.5 maybe more) but nothing really changes...
This is how I feel too. Will I buy the new core books next year, most likely just to check it out, but I'm leaning towards not supporting it thereafter aside from the occasional campaign setting possibly. I haven't fully read the playtest documents let alone playtest them but have read parts of them and skimmed the rest. I'm not saying its bad but I haven't seen anything radical enough to actually call it 6E, 5.5E seems more realistic to me. Honestly I'm tired of the d20 system and it seems stale to me nowadays. Personally, if the core mechanic chassis isn't dramatically changed (as was the case with the transition from 2E to 3E) I'm not really interested. WotC release schedule is to lean and the products they are putting out are not too interesting to me, so I'd like to see this change as I have no interest in their endless glut of adventures, and updated campaign settings. Create a new system, and a new campaign setting that's fresh and innovative then you'll have my attention.
I would give them a little more respect for their honesty, and maybe 6e would end up on it's own forum once released so it doesn't get conflated with 5e. That'd be cool.
It only matters because D&D has previously trained players to associate the word "edition" with a distinctly new version of the game. That would have ramifications for whether you would buy a new adventure that comes out this year, for example. If you thought this was a 3rd to 4th edition-type edition change, you would probably be disincentivized from buying a new 5e book. Also, that degree of change would break DnDBeyond.
That is why WotC keeps emphasizing that they still see this as 5e, and all your existing 5e stuff will still work. Some folks seem to think such a thing is impossible (including, apparently, whoever named this forum "OneD&D (5.5E)). Which just fuels endless debate about what it should be called and whether the changes are radical enough, when WotC has been very clear about this from the beginning: it will be called "D&D," full stop, it will use the rules for 5e with some updates, and all the books will be backwards compatible with existing 5e books, including and especially on DnDBeyond.
What changes? A marketing ghoul explodes from their dumb idea of 'D&D Forever Edition' finally dies and a single shaft of light pierces dramatically and symbolically through the dust cloud that remains.