Probably not. But maybe he should at some point just say: "You know, I don't want that new edition with the 2d20 damage longswords. I have understood what the designers are attempting with this, but I still don't like their goals. I just have to do something else."
There is no need to open a new thread
"Longswords still deal 2d20. I still don't like it."
"Longswords should deal 1d6, but they deal 2d20. Explain this to me again."
"I think Longswords deal too much damage. That is terribly bad and this is no longer the type of game I want to play."
Agreed, but then I am not opening these threads. If there was a thread for folks to discuss "Longswords deal 2d20. I don't like it." without folks coming in to tell them that (a) longswords
don't deal 2d20, (b) longswords
always dealt 2d20, (c) they are fooling themselves; longswords
should deal 2d20, and even (d) they
really like longswords dealing 2d20; they just don't know it yet, I suppose there would be less of a problem.
Of course, I have noted that, with Schroedinger's Wounding, a number of threads have opened with no apparent purpose but to say that those who believe it is a feature of 4e are kinda stupid.
Overall, I guess what I am saying is that (1) there is a thread ignore tool on EN World, and (2) if you don't enjoy discussing moonpies, don't discuss moonpies. Again, have you seen me disrupting
any pro-4e discussions since the game came out? Any? There is a reason for that.
I will also note that there are some great pro-4e folks who are, apparently, not at all threatened that some don't like their game of choice, and don't go around disrupting anti-4e discussions. Or maybe they are just really smart, and know that
the fastest way to make anti-anything threads go away is to not post pro-same thing in them.
Oh, also you missed my point: "X has always had problem Y, Z just makes it worse" is not a very convincing pro-Z argument. Making Y worse isn't good game design, and if you had problem Y when it was less of a problem, Z is unlikely to fix it for you.
RC