Blackwarder
Adventurer
I got into D&D because I though that the big box at the game store window, with the lone axe man against the great big dragon, was a board game.
It had a map of a dungeon, a small book, dices, and cards with a "chose your path" style adventure that you played on the map solo (I almost forgot the paper minis).
it also had the solo adventure as an adventure that you could run your friends through. It was the most awsome thing I ever got for my birthday until than (twenty years later I got my first iPhone but that's another story
)
My point is, having an entry level box set like the one I got, and then having another tier of products for AD&D seems like a great idea for me. Up until 3e I always felt that every version of D&D I ever played was essentially the same and was interchangeable, 3e and 4e not so much.
Warder
It had a map of a dungeon, a small book, dices, and cards with a "chose your path" style adventure that you played on the map solo (I almost forgot the paper minis).
it also had the solo adventure as an adventure that you could run your friends through. It was the most awsome thing I ever got for my birthday until than (twenty years later I got my first iPhone but that's another story

My point is, having an entry level box set like the one I got, and then having another tier of products for AD&D seems like a great idea for me. Up until 3e I always felt that every version of D&D I ever played was essentially the same and was interchangeable, 3e and 4e not so much.
Warder
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