I think one of the changes thay made that bugged me, and was one of my personal sticking points on converting, was the changes in sizes. To me, at least, it made sense to have long and narrow areas of influence for some creatures. The "square horses" along with "square snakes" made me question that whole line of logic. The other size objection I had was the changes to weapons. It made no sense to me then, and makes even less sense now.Henry said:We switched, mainly because I liked some of the things they did, like the sizes, the improvements in some feats, and the alterations of certain key spells (harm and haste for example) and so far we haven't regretted it.
My group averaged 15 years of age when 3.5 came out, and thus that sort of stuff didn't really matter to us (well, more like we just didn't 'get' the game enough for that to really matter) but in any case, looking back I think that those were much better rules for area and for weapons. I also have the same opinion on 3.0s concealment - it was, and is, better than 3.5e.sjmiller said:I think one of the changes thay made that bugged me, and was one of my personal sticking points on converting, was the changes in sizes. To me, at least, it made sense to have long and narrow areas of influence for some creatures. The "square horses" along with "square snakes" made me question that whole line of logic. The other size objection I had was the changes to weapons. It made no sense to me then, and makes even less sense now.
sjmiller said:First, I will say that my group did not switch. We started shortly before 3.5 came out and we decided that nobody wanted to spend the money buying a second set of books. Besides, the changes were not all that dramatic.
Now, getting to the quote. I know they "fixed" the Ranger and made some changes to the Druid, but what other changes were made to classes?