Well, the "we" here is not well-defined, but that's a bit stronger than what I am saying.
The "We" there was a response to MichaelSomething's comment about the "Traditional" gamer demographic, which skewed more Simulationist, which more games catered to in the 2000s.
D&D does not have a single, well-defined, target demographic it aims for, so of course you aren't it.
Fair.
If you have very specific desires of any sort, D&D probably won't provide them. D&D makes some compromises to do this, and if you are uncompromising, again, it won't meet your needs.
Right. 5e didn't really provide
any of the experiences I am looking for from a TTRPG or from a D&D Product. (And I've not played 5.5 but from what I've seen of it that doesn't appear to have changed in that regard - I haven't looked at the new FR books yet, but I won't be buying them unless I've confirmed I won't regret it). 3.0 came the closest to meeting my "specific desires" from a D&D TTRPG; 3.5 was generally worse, and it's been downhill for me from there.
But, that seems to be a winning strategy - back since the 1999 WotC segmentation study, there's been suggestion that the bulk of gamers aren't really looking for a tightly focused playstyle. They want a bit of everything, and they don't want getting that bit of everything to be too much of a hassle.
Sure. I wasn't saying it was a bad business move. Simply observing that they don't make products that do anything to appeal to me anymore, and that for me to have fun I avoid their products. That doesn't make them evil (though I have some stronger opinions regarding them apparently
telling people Ed Greenwood is dead, when people try to contact him about Forgotten Realms stuff; and the decision to neither involve him as a consultant on the film nor list him in the credits even though the film was
full of characters and locations he made; and what seems like a continual disregard for their license with Greenwood to use the Realms, because he doesn't have the money to fight them in court (
Greenwood touches on it a bit in this one with a lot of tact), and everything they did back in 2023... etc - so I
do think Hasbro is an evil organisation (in the manner typical for a publicly traded LLC), but they're not evil for stopping making products for me).
The three 5e books I didn't regret buying before I stopped playing it, one was a limited GenCon printrun (Lost Tales of Myth Drannor); One I use for entirely offlabel applications (Dragon Heist, I just grab characters, maps, and locations, for waterdeep games, and drop the plot); and the third was outsourced to Wolfgang Baur (Out of the Abyss). I liked Elminster's Forgotten Realms, and the Audible Audiobooks, but those were way back in 2012, before 5e.