Whizbang Dustyboots
Gnometown Hero
Good point. For plenty of people, that's as good as official.it'll be on Beyond, at the least
Good point. For plenty of people, that's as good as official.it'll be on Beyond, at the least
I went with what the post I replied to saidI think your confusion about the rift is that you're thinking of it as a disagreement about rules. But since Luke plays current WotC D&D bringing up OSR is odd. The 'rift' wasn't about rules.
Having a rift in the community, between the OSR crowd, the modern D&D crowd, and WotC
Thing is, at an earlier point in 5E, Luke Gygax was plugged in with WotC, same as Weiss & Hickman, or Ed Greenwood, or Joe Mangianello. Somewhere in the shuffle of personnel, those connections all cooled significantly. Now, Ayoub is back to building bridges.I went with what the post I replied to said
I am fine with the rift being elsewhere, but then it is even less relevant from my perspective. A Gygax was not involved with D&D since before 2e was released and D&D did just fine without them, so to me there is no 'need' at get them involved now.
there is no 'need' at get them involved now.
Maybe they'll make it a little gritter to try and attract old heads like me
That would be nice. Maybe a little more gritty turn in what they put out.I do have to wonder if this is outreach to those of us not Millennial and younger.
Another point from the panel worth mention for context on how Dan Ayoub is likely going to run D&D: Ayoub has been playing D&D since he got the Red Box at age 12.whixh is not super abnormal...but he is still actively playing with his friend group that started with the Red Box in the 80s.I went with what the post I replied to said
I am fine with the rift being elsewhere, but then it is even less relevant from my perspective. A Gygax was not involved with D&D since before 2e was released and D&D did just fine without them, so to me there is no 'need' to get them involved now.
I'm not sure I'd view any of the post-TSR content any of the Gygaxes put out as particularly "gritty." Old school, yes, in the sense that "if we didn't bother describing it in 1979, we're not describing it now," but tonally? Nah.That would be nice. Maybe a little more gritty turn in what they put out.
Anyone can do a Forgotten Realms book on D&D Beyond, but the books involving Ed Greenwood are orders of magnitude more popular than books by random fans. Like the current "Souls for the Taking" sitting at #1 for at least a couple of weeks now.I would assume a WotC book, anybody can just do a Greyhawk DM's Guild book.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.