Krieg said:No Gygax = no D&D. No Planesdragon = no change of any signifigance.
This is exactly the sort of fawning I'm talking about. We must never, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever criticize Saint Gary because he started the game.
I do not fawn.
Krieg said:No Gygax = no D&D. No Planesdragon = no change of any signifigance.
Power_Word_Wedgie said:Well why was the choice made to stay with the framework of Arneson and Gygax. If it was so archaic why not just ditch everything. They did that when it came to THACO and combat charts.
Power_Word_Wedgie said:All of the classes are the same from PHB/Unearth Arcana as they are in 3rd edition PHB.
Power_Word_Wedgie said:Initiative and combat sequenes are pretty similar except a rule change or two.
Power_Word_Wedgie said:Weapon damage is pretty much the same between the two editions.
Power_Word_Wedgie said:Arneson and Gygax should have been quoted as authors on the 3rd edition books because most of the material is the same.
Planesdragon said:Condemnation?
Go back and read my post. I said that Gary (1) had a lack of understanding and (2) was arrogant--as in, more confident and outspoken than his accomplishments give him a right to.
Planesdragon said:OTOH, Mr. Gygax's actions since he left TSR nearly twenty years ago are suffiicent to give some cause to disrespect him
Planesdragon said:If I wanted to list things to condemn Mr. Gygax for, I would probably start with what he did while in charge of TSR, and continue with the overly geeky way he has portrayed our hobby since.
Then maybe you shouldn't be complaining about that trait in others.Planesdragon said:1: I never claimed not to be arrogant.
Planesdragon said:2: The man wrote a game system that had names changed for no real good reason, and not a few weeks ago advocated the sort of tight-control over RPG products that would have meant that everything d20 that SSS or Mongoose or Malhovic have ever done would have simply not been created.
Planesdragon said:Some people express a fondness for differenet "game systems", as if learning how to play a game was so much fun you'd rather learn a new game than play one you know. This is, in my opinion, simply wrong--not maliciously wrong, not foolishly wrong, but the sort of wrong that a good meaning intelligent person can mistankingly conclude.
Planesdragon said:In so much that d20 resembles AD&D is purposeful choice, not lack of inspiration. It resembles OD&D and AD&D because it was meant to--but once you get past the shallow familiarity, you notice that everything simply works cleaner and better.
![Devious :] :]](http://www.enworld.org/forum/images/smilies/devious.png)
Lord Rasputin said:In reading interviews with and articles from the designers, they considered the sort of changes you describe.
This, of course, is flat-out not true. Were this so, I would expect one of two things:
1) to see the Cavalier, Thief-Acrobat and Assassin in the PHB 3e
or
2) to see the Sorcerer in the PHB 1e or Unearthed Arcana 1e.
Another completely untrue statement. In 1e, roll a d6 each round, high roll goes first, modified by the incomprehensible Weapon Speed Factor rules everyone ignored. (I'm talking about 1e, not 2e, I know Weapon Speed Factor was much better in that.) In 3e, roll d20 at the start of combat, Dex modifier, same order continuously.
Except for the different damage against large size creatures.
Read the title page on the 3.5e PHB:
"Based on the original Dungeons & Dragons game created by E. Gary Gygax and Dave Arneson."
Dogbrain said:So what? That doesn't mean that whatever sounds happen to randomly come out of his mouth these days are automatically pearls of wisdom. There is a vast difference between due respect and sycophantic fawning. Every single time, without fail, that somebody expresses disagreement with one of Gygax's more recent boneheaded statements, some lickspittle comes along to say "he invented the game" as if that were some sort of be-all and end-all response. It isn't. It's fawning, it's obsequious, it's sycophantic, and it's ridiculous.
Amen, brother.viscounteric said:In the hierarchy of gaming legends: Gygax, Arneson, and Lou Zocchi sit atop the gamer gods by the grognards (google Zocchi - Gamescience little children and learn!).
For ba-jillions of little card gamers, Richard Garfield goes here.
Steve Jackson, Sandy Peterson, and *cough* Kevin Siembeda (sp?) are on the intermediate level. Peter Adkinson would fit here in an directly opposite spot that she-who-shall-not-be-named should be here (Not all gaming legends are good!)
alleynbard said:"Monte Cook: I'll nod to his editing/development with Rolemaster, but most of his impressive credits (save Labyrinth of Madness) are less than five years old. I won't even consider him in the above categories for another 5 years or so."
Umm, he practically wrote the 3.0 DMG. Why does he figure so low on your list?