Camarath said:
I would resent any real attempt to change the game from the one I am currently enjoying to one which I do not believe I would enjoy as much.
Well, like I said...
This kind of attitude has discouraged me from ever trying to discuss that particular issue again, in any forum.
Having said that, In a probably fruitless effort to discuss the discussion, if you will, I feel I should point out that you are making some incorrect assumptions.
1) By suggesting a change in the core rules or marketing strategy or d20 license or whatever, I am not necesaarily telling you how to change how you run your own campaign. As all the anti-reform advocates point out, you can house rule the game any way you want.
2) D&D is not static, it
is changing with every new WOTC release, even third party d20 material changes the game, with every conversation on these boards. Version 4 will arrive, like it or not! If I chime in on some ideas on what direction I think those changes should take, it doesn't mean I'm trying to ruin or sabotage the game.
3) Similarly, if I'm suggesting that the percieved course of certain ongoing changes in D&D may be potentially leading to or causing some problem, I am not ATTACKING you, how you play your game, or D&D in general. I am either wrong or right or partially wrong or right, but thats as far it needs to go.
Imagine we are all on a cruise ship, and unlike most cruise ships, the toilets are not backed up, and we are all having a great time, going from one idylic carribean isle to another. If I happen to be looking at a satelite image on my laptop computer which seems to bode for the possibility of a hurricane coming, and I mention that we might want to consider a course change, that doesn't mean I'm out to sink the ship. Quite to the contrary.
4) the reactionary, hyperconservative attitude a lot of fans have toward D&D does not necessarily bode well for it's future.
DB