Henadic Theologian
Legend
Some of the questions and answers are worded in such a way that I believe results will be skewed due to leading the audience to preconceived ideas.
Any particularly examples of that come to mind?
Some of the questions and answers are worded in such a way that I believe results will be skewed due to leading the audience to preconceived ideas.
Any particularly examples of that come to mind?
Common problem with any survey. It is pretty hard to make generic questions that do not bias some of the respondent's answers. There are dissertations galore on it if interested.I would need to go back and re-read. Mostly, I remember the wording about why people like certain things being skewed toward assuming that the person taking the survey felt that certain things were good to include/highlight in a setting.
Common problem with any survey. It is pretty hard to make generic questions that do not bias some of the respondent's answers. There are dissertations galore on it if interested.
I think you downplay how big Dragonlance was back in the day.More folks read FR novels then any other D&D setting, novels (or transmedia) should have been on the list at least.
Word for word, no, but I did write a case for Greyhawk once or twice in the past for them, and the points I made fall in line with these checkmark options. I do not doubt that they got a lot of feedback covering similar ground for each of these Settings, and this is their attempt at a synthesis for each Setting to see if it resonates with the fans for those Settings.
The weird thing to me is how shallow the Dragonlance optiosn are: "I like the novels" and "I like Dragons" are a little less in depth than the Birthright choices, for example.
Yeah seriously. I had to add a whole spiel in the Other column.Like, the Birthright and Mystara options could be expanded into a full page product proposal, whereas Dragonlanace is just "I like the novels" and "I like dragons."
I don't think thst it is a flaw necessarily, just suggests that dracophilia and love of the novels are probably the big themes they've gotten before.Yeah seriously. I had to add a whole spiel in the Other column.
It means there is widespread magic, but it is very low level, and there are vanishingly few high level magics or magic users.Huh. What does that mean, I’ve never heard of wide magic before.
Nah I think they meant exactly what they typed.I think they meant to write High Magic instead of low…
In the past, they just had open-ended comment fields for the favorite Setting question: these felt like an attempt to distill the key aspects of previous feedback and see if they float with the fanbase.I would need to go back and re-read. Mostly, I remember the wording about why people like certain things being skewed toward assuming that the person taking the survey felt that certain things were good to include/highlight in a setting.