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<blockquote data-quote="malkav666" data-source="post: 4996163" data-attributes="member: 70565"><p>Heh, a lot of the games my group plays are OOP. If it were not for adding Pathfinder to our 3.x games I would venture to say that most of them are OOP.</p><p></p><p>It does not matter to me or my group in the slightest what out of print and whats in print. What matters is more along the lines of what is the best fit, the most fun, the best overall experience, etc.</p><p></p><p>There are some great games that went the to the wayside (or to fan support only) over the years, and we have no problems picking those games up and playing them. And then you have the games with multiple editions... My stance on that is that if the new edition doesn't do it better than an edition I have already invested heavily in, then there is no real benefit to buying more books just to stay current, with an edition that strays heavily away from what my group and I find to be entertaining.</p><p></p><p>In short, we only need to learn the rules once. Just because something is no longer officially supported does not mean it ceases to exist or I will somehow unlearn it. I can still teach it to others or make games with it to play with my friends. All it requires is use of the imagination, and the imagination does not need something to be in print to dream about it.</p><p></p><p>love,</p><p></p><p>malkav</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="malkav666, post: 4996163, member: 70565"] Heh, a lot of the games my group plays are OOP. If it were not for adding Pathfinder to our 3.x games I would venture to say that most of them are OOP. It does not matter to me or my group in the slightest what out of print and whats in print. What matters is more along the lines of what is the best fit, the most fun, the best overall experience, etc. There are some great games that went the to the wayside (or to fan support only) over the years, and we have no problems picking those games up and playing them. And then you have the games with multiple editions... My stance on that is that if the new edition doesn't do it better than an edition I have already invested heavily in, then there is no real benefit to buying more books just to stay current, with an edition that strays heavily away from what my group and I find to be entertaining. In short, we only need to learn the rules once. Just because something is no longer officially supported does not mean it ceases to exist or I will somehow unlearn it. I can still teach it to others or make games with it to play with my friends. All it requires is use of the imagination, and the imagination does not need something to be in print to dream about it. love, malkav [/QUOTE]
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