I played D&D Next many times and concluded it was likely for me.
Me too, it's looking like what I wanted 3rd Ed to be back in 2,000.
I played D&D Next many times and concluded it was likely for me.
The only one coming off as biased is you, and I do not believe at all that you have played 5th Ed "a lot", if at all.
Just another passive-aggressive 5th Ed bashing post.
Thanks for your baseless, untrue, and accusatory post. Stay classy.
Thanks for your baseless, untrue, and accusatory post. Stay classy.
As a matter of fact I didn't accuse the OP of anything other than creating a poll that is not representative of the larger D&D community but only representative of this one board AND that it seems to have been built with the intention to scorn those who judged the game unfit without having played it extensively. Please, by all means, correct me if I'm wrong on that [MENTION=2525]Mistwell[/MENTION], but that struck me as your intention.
This poll is flawed. I bet no one in this topic has played FATAL but I would be willing to bet none of you feel that's necessary to decide if the game is for you or not.
There's also a severe selection bias here (to the point where we are no longer talking "statistically relevant" but "statistically bonkers"). This forum is overwhelmingly biased towards 5e and overwhelming biased towards die-hard players who've been keeping up with the playtest.
I don't really like repeating myself any more than you probably do so we can just leave it at that.
I think your case is quite common: you own a lot of systems already, so another edition of D&D doesn't necessarily make for a significant addition to the array of games you can play. But I do think that this makes you part of the captive audience nevertheless!
By contrast, the only RPG books I own are D&D 3e. If I buy 5e, it will definitely be much more for me than just another option![]()
I had the same feeling about that passage... I used to do similar things when I was a beginner DM, but in time I learned that I prefer to rely on written DCs and other numbers, especially for physical challenges. Of course when it comes to non-physical challenges, or more precisely to challenges that are impossible to compare with each other in absolute terms, such as convincing a guard to let you pass "because I am an old friend of the Duke", or to recall the meaning of the 247th arcane symbol you see in a dungeon, the DC are pretty much made up all the time... the range can be told by the rules, but how does the exact DC vary between bluffing Joe the guard or bluffing Jack the other guard, are pretty much random.
I played D&D Next many times and concluded it was likely for me.