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Is D&D a setting or a toolbox?
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<blockquote data-quote="Viking Bastard" data-source="post: 6135666" data-attributes="member: 509"><p>D&D does not <em>require</em> hacking. Anyway, what definition of hacking are you using? People have been using the word to describe everything from small tinkering and house rules to hacking together a new game, which is what meaning <em>I--myself--personally</em> have always put into the term. When I call D&D a toolbox (or framework), I do not mean "easily hackable". I mean that it's a game which consists of wealth of material (conveniently listed in catalogs like the various Monster Manuals, Splat Books, Planes of Existence) to cherry pick from to piece together my own D&D game (as in the game at my table) and setting (as in the one I create myself). I appreciate that D&D gives me this, while also making a lot of micro decisions for me, without forcing a setting down my throat. It's like the Mac OS of RPGs.</p><p></p><p>I don't know much about Hero, but GURPS was my old group's preferred system for a few years, as it's the near-ultimate toolbox and we liked being able to jump between genres without having to change rule systems. GURPS is a lot of work, though, as it decidedly doesn't make those micro-decisions for you, and plays in a way very different from D&D. We used it to recreate D&D-esque games (among other things) as me and my group did not really care for pre-d20 D&D rules as a whole, despite loving the D&D genre. It took us a while to get GURPS to "feel" enough like D&D in the way it played, so we hacked away at it until it did--significantly changed how it played at the table, while still using the wealth of information that came with GURPS.</p><p></p><p>I think when people feel motivated to hack D&D, it's something similar going on. People want to use that wealth of information (of which no other game has in the same abundance) but want it to play differently. Or they want something different to <em>play</em> like D&D, while jettisoning D&D genre-expectation.</p><p></p><p>I hope this helps you understand.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Viking Bastard, post: 6135666, member: 509"] D&D does not [i]require[/i] hacking. Anyway, what definition of hacking are you using? People have been using the word to describe everything from small tinkering and house rules to hacking together a new game, which is what meaning [i]I--myself--personally[/i] have always put into the term. When I call D&D a toolbox (or framework), I do not mean "easily hackable". I mean that it's a game which consists of wealth of material (conveniently listed in catalogs like the various Monster Manuals, Splat Books, Planes of Existence) to cherry pick from to piece together my own D&D game (as in the game at my table) and setting (as in the one I create myself). I appreciate that D&D gives me this, while also making a lot of micro decisions for me, without forcing a setting down my throat. It's like the Mac OS of RPGs. I don't know much about Hero, but GURPS was my old group's preferred system for a few years, as it's the near-ultimate toolbox and we liked being able to jump between genres without having to change rule systems. GURPS is a lot of work, though, as it decidedly doesn't make those micro-decisions for you, and plays in a way very different from D&D. We used it to recreate D&D-esque games (among other things) as me and my group did not really care for pre-d20 D&D rules as a whole, despite loving the D&D genre. It took us a while to get GURPS to "feel" enough like D&D in the way it played, so we hacked away at it until it did--significantly changed how it played at the table, while still using the wealth of information that came with GURPS. I think when people feel motivated to hack D&D, it's something similar going on. People want to use that wealth of information (of which no other game has in the same abundance) but want it to play differently. Or they want something different to [i]play[/i] like D&D, while jettisoning D&D genre-expectation. I hope this helps you understand. [/QUOTE]
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