MERGED - "About Edition Wars" threads x9

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You're all invited inside the Big Tent of D&D

This post started as a reply to ShinHakkaider from this thread but it got out of hand and I thought it necessitated its own thread.

First of all, Shin, I do not think that you are a jerk or a bad person. I do question, however, the assertion that 4E doesn't have a connection to the games before it. I mean, no matter how you look at it, it does. Maybe not to the degree that 2E was like 1E, or even 3E like 2E (although that is debatable), but it is still obviously connected, still part of the same continuum. Sure, there are major stylistic differences, but that doesn't sever the connection.


(The rest of the post is not addressed to Shin specifically).

I've been playing D&D off and on for almost three decades. I grew up on AD&D, played 2E when it came out, went through a hiatus of a few years in the mid to late 90s when I barely gamed at all, then discovered the predecessor to this site in 1999 and got excited about 3E, which I loved when it came out. I played for a few years and then went through another RPG-hiatus from about 2004 to 2008 when I only followed the industry lightly but didn't play. Then I got excited with the arrival of 4E and formed a new group late in '08, which continues to this day.

My group is comprised of 30-and-40-somethings, all of whom--except for myself--haven't played since college or even high school. To the person, our "formative phase" of gaming was 1E or 2E AD&D. Our style of game play could just as easily be 1E as 4E, OD&D or 3.whatever. I've created my own setting that takes much more from Robert E Howard and JRR Tolkien than it does from World of Warcraft or Hong Kong action movies. It is a mixture of sandbox, dungeon crawls, with smatterings of larger story elements, uncovering the true history of the world, exploration of wilderness, etc. I generally don't allow dragonborn or tieflings because I just can't stand either of them, especially dragonborn (although if a player really wanted to play one I'd find a way to make it happen, maybe as a unique creature), and I'm so-so on shifters and goliaths.

And you know what? 4E works for us. My setting and our game style are much more rooted in the gaming traditions of the 70s-90s than the recent CRPG-influenced years. There are things that I don't like about 4E--I feel the magic has been taken out of magic items, I don't like the power structure for all classes (which Essentials seems to be rectifying), I don't like what they did with alignment, and I don't like many of the fluff elements, among other things. But I really like a lot of the innovations, the simplified core mechanic (which was from 3E), the way AC and Defenses are used, powers for most classes, a consolidated skills list, Character Builder, the balance of classes, the de-emphasis on system mastery and the re-emphasis on tactical savvy, etc. It is not perfect, it is not the D&D I grew up on, but I enjoy playing it.

But my key point is that I make the game my own. It is still Dungeons & Dragons because that is how we play it. It is still d20 based, with the six ability scores, armor class, hit points, vorpal sword-wielding githyanki, elves and dwarves, gelatinous cubes and mind flayers. All the tropes are still there, waiting to be configured in a way that I and my players find pleasing. Yes, rules matter but not as much as the way that one uses them, and not as much as the "fluff" (the story, action, narrative, characters and setting) that they are meant to support.

Have you ever noticed how a lot of people stay with the same hair cut and general styles and tastes that they had around the time they were in college? There are various points in our lives when we “crystallize” around something, a kind of imprinting that occurs and something is set within us. I think this is why many long-time gamers stay with D&D; speaking for myself, there are game systems out there that I think are better than D&D, that are more elegantly designed without all the clutter and unnecessary minutiae (Savage Worlds comes to mind). Most of my favorite fantasy settings were not created for D&D – Earthdawn, Talislanta, and Shadow World, for instance. But I always come back to D&D, it just feels right to me. However, the specific form it takes--the edition or variation--is less important than the family of ideas, memes, tropes, and worlds I enter when I crack open a D&D book. And you know what? 4E works just fine for me.

If you say, “4E is not D&D to me,” I can say, fine, that’s your choice and I honor and respect that, and may even be curious about why you prefer another edition. Not only am I okay with your opinion, but I actually like the fact that there are people out there with different tastes, styles, and preferences. Unity in diversity!

But if you say that “4E is not real D&D” I can tell you that you are wrong, because for thousands, if not millions of people—many of whom have played other editions of D&D—it certain is real D&D. Are we all wrong? Are we deluded in thinking that we are playing D&D? Or is it, perhaps, that your perspective is rather limited as to what D&D is and can be? And you know what? It doesn’t take a thing away from you or your preferred version of D&D to open the tent a bit and invite everyone in. We all share (at least) one thing: our love of the greatest game in the world. Let us recognize that fact, at least.
 

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I've had a thread bumming around for about a year now about all the similarities between 4E and earlier editions, event down to such constructs as "having a 'short rest' at the end of a combat, a la 1st edition AD&D." (Only difference was the AD&D one was 10 minutes, and the 4E one is five minutes) Not sure which subforum it would be in anymore -- everything's been moved around a few times since then. Long story short, even discounting the spiritual similarities, there are quite a few ways mechanically it mimics things that used to be done years ago, but got left behind for 3E.

Back in the height of the "Edition Wars" when people were posting stuff like "RIP D&D 1974-2008" I was tempted to have a sig that said:

"1E 1977 - 1989
2E 1989-2000
4E 2008-present
Welcome Home, D&D."

However, it would have been the height of jackholery, so I decided not to do it. :)

I liked Nifft's statement:
"There is only one D&D. All these different "editions" are just window-dressing for the shared joy of hanging out with friends, killing made-up monsters and taking their imaginary stuff."
It's pretty true, at least for me.
 

Nice positive post!

I've never understood those who feel the need to crap on my 4e D&D parade. I'm okay if you've tried and didn't like it. I'm okay if you didn't try it and have decided not to bother. I'm okay if you simply prefer an older edition or even some other system, Pathfinder, retro-clone, or what-have-you.

But the need to cry "It's not D&D!" . . . when so clearly it is, doesn't compute for me.

The attitude isn't unique to our fandom, I've had friends who get all riled up when you talk about one of the various Star Trek shows that simply "wasn't Star Trek!" But it has always puzzled me, and annoyed the holy hell out of me too.

If you don't care for it and wish to share your opinions why . . . okay. Just don't be a self-entitled jackhole about it.

Tolerance and civility are virtues that we need more of in this hobby (heck, in general I guess).
 

If you say, “4E is not D&D to me,” I can say, fine, that’s your choice and I honor and respect that, and may even be curious about why you prefer another edition. Not only am I okay with your opinion, but I actually like the fact that there are people out there with different tastes, styles, and preferences. Unity in diversity!

Sounds good. But if what you said is true? Then you would have responded with something along the lines of:

"You know what? I disagree, but I respect that you feel that way. Have fun playing whatever you play."

But instead:

First of all, Shin, I do not think that you are a jerk or a bad person. I do question, however, the assertion that 4E doesn't have a connection to the games before it. I mean, no matter how you look at it, it does. Maybe not to the degree that 2E was like 1E, or even 3E like 2E (although that is debatable), but it is still obviously connected, still part of the same continuum. Sure, there are major stylistic differences, but that doesn't sever the connection.

Now this is what you were responding to:

Obviously, the brand is Dungeon & Dragons so that's never in dispute.

But as far as kinder and gentler and inclusive it's a pity that there are too many people who are content to crap all over what other people like. The wounds from the edition wars are very deep for me at least and I'm not even someone who has a hatred for 4E. It's just not my game of choice and NO it doesn't feel like D&D to me. I dont think that it's a terrible or antagonistic thing to say. I'm not even saying "I dont consider it D&D" or "It's not D&D". I'm saying TO ME "It doesn't feel like the game that I've been playing off and on since red box basic" Even 3E felt like it had a connection to the games that came prior to it. 4E FOR ME didn't feel like it had that connection. It does for it's fans. GREAT. For me it didn't. And I dont see why that makes me a bad person or some kind of jerk for saying it.


You apparently missed the part IN CAPS where I pretty clearly state:

I'm saying TO ME "It doesn't feel like the game that I've been playing off and on since red box basic" Even 3E felt like it had a connection to the games that came prior to it. 4E FOR ME didn't feel like it had that connection. It does for it's fans. GREAT. For me it didn't.

When you say that you respect someone's opinion it's either you do or you don't. You cant say that "if you say x I can respect that" then turn around and
tell them their opinion is wrong.

Again: TO ME 4E lacks that connection. To you and other 4E fans it does not. GREAT. Party on D00d's. But dont turn around in the same breath and tell me that I'm wrong for feeling the way that I do. THIS is one of the main reasons why the edition wars keep going.

"I feel X"

"Well youre wrong about feeling X. Here's why."

"I thought Highlander 2 was a terrible movie"

"Well youre wrong. Here's why..."

"I think 4E is an amazing system"

"Well youre wrong here's why..."

"I think ENWorld is an amazing, inclusive community for D&D Players of all stripes"

"Well, youre wrong here's why..."

With any of those examples, do you honestly think by "correcting" the errors of their ways that you are going to convince them to agree with you? By telling them basically "Hey, I dont know you, but that time you spent playing 4E and the impression that you got from it? TOTALLY WRONG. Here's why..."

You can see how that can come off in not so much a positive light right?
 

Shin said:
When you say that you respect someone's opinion it's either you do or you don't. You cant say that "if you say x I can respect that" then turn around and
tell them their opinion is wrong.

Really?

AD&D isn't really a role playing game. It's a proto-roleplaying game still stuck in its wargame roots. It's a tabletop wargame where players control single figures instead of units. The game does not presume the assumption of any role, nor does it reward acting in character. The only thing the game rewards is killing and looting. It's a good attempt at a role playing game, but, it falls short.*

This is my opinion and you cannot say I'm wrong.​

Really? No one can say I'm wrong here because I tack "for me" and "IMO" onto things?

*[sblock]No, I do not really think this. I think AD&D most certainly is a role playing game. I do feel it lacks some elements, but, that certainly doesn't stop it from being a role playing game.[/sblock]
 

First of all, Shin, I do not think that you are a jerk or a bad person. I do question, however, the assertion that 4E doesn't have a connection to the games before it. I mean, no matter how you look at it, it does. Maybe not to the degree that 2E was like 1E, or even 3E like 2E (although that is debatable), but it is still obviously connected, still part of the same continuum. Sure, there are major stylistic differences, but that doesn't sever the connection.
For me, I do question the connections other than to the game immediately before it.

There's a striking parallel, actually, between the 1e-4e interrelation and the current set-up of our gaming crew.

We have 4 campaigns currently on the go, under 4 different DMs; let's call these campaigns A-B-C-D. A and B are 1e, C and D are 3e.

A and B have 3 players in common.
B and C have 3 players in common.
C and D have 2 players in common.

Of those, 1 player links A-B-C and another links B-C-D.

Yet A and D, despite all these connections, have absolutely no players in common with each other and aren't likely to anytime soon. So while it's a continuum, that doesn't mean they're all the same.

Now, look what happens when you substitute edition numbers for letters above, A = 1 to D = 4: it works almost exactly the same! 1 has links to 2, 2 has links to 3, 3 has links to 4, but 1 and 4 have no link at all. So while it's a continuum, that doesn't mean they're all the same.

Lan-"mine is 'A' in the above example"-efan
 


vorpal sword-wielding githyanki, elves and dwarves, gelatinous cubes and mind flayers. All the tropes are still there, waiting to be configured in a way that I and my players find pleasing.

For some of us though, all of the tropes really aren't there. Enough of them aren't there that it doesn't feel like the connection to 1e/2e/3e is still there to be part of the same continuum, especially where flavor and world detail are concerned. But if it's enough for you, keep playing the game that you like and I wish you all the best.
 
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Are OD&D, AD&D, Basic (BX, BECMI, etc.), 3e (& 3.5), and 4e all "Dungeons & Dragons"? In my opinion, yes, they are... the same way that soccer, rugby, American football, Canadian football, and Australian football are all "football".

I consider the different editions to be related to each other, yet distinct games in their own right. They all can claim the mantle of "Dungeons & Dragons", even though they are all separate games... the same way that the different games called "football" can all be called "football", yet be separate and distinct games.
 

But if you say that “4E is not real D&D” I can tell you that you are wrong, because for thousands, if not millions of people—many of whom have played other editions of D&D—it certain is real D&D.

I think the root of this problem is that "real D&D" is a phrase without meaning.

What I can say is that there was a game invented in 1974 called Dungeons & Dragons. Its rules were revised. Its math was cleaned up and occasionally tweaked. New options were added. But its fundamental gameplay remained the same.

Until 2008. When a game with fundamentally different gameplay -- that had been explicitly and specifically designed in order to feature fundamentally different gameplay -- was released with the same trademark on the cover.

That doesn't mean it's not a good game. It doesn't mean it's "not D&D". (It clearly is: It's got the name on the cover and everything.) But it ain't the same game. And it was specifically designed that way, so it really shouldn't be so shocking for some people to discover that this is true.
 

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