Tony Vargas
Legend
I'm a data analyst, by profession, so do I tend to look at things analytically, and, yes, as 'objectively' as I can (philosophical points about perception determining reality notwithstanding).I have seen this said before, perhaps even by you, and it surprises me that you feel what makes a high quality game is objective and not subjective.
I also pay a lot of attention to how people debate, some of that started with critical thinking in school, but a lot of it is from a modest interest in politics. My observation is that once one side of a debate has failed to prove their assertion logically or 'objectively,' they turn to the defense that the issue is 'all subjective.'
So, yes, 4e is, as I said, on a /technical level/ (which is just a limited part of what makes a game great), objectively higher-quality than prior eds. That doesn't require anyone to like it, though, nor am I - especially at this late date, with 4e /dead/ - trying to ruin anyone's enjoyment of the hobby by converting them to the losing side of the edition war.
D&D had lost me by 1995. I don't have the subjective bias for the game that I did when I defended AD&D's quirks to aficionados of different systems in the 80s. I don't have any fetish for the new or anything, either. I liked 3.0 for the things it did better than classic D&D, enough so that it brought me back to the game, though with only modest enthusiasm. I was unimpressed with 3.5's change-for-the-sake-of-change (and selling the core books again), but it wasn't any worse than 3e, so I kept playing it, even if I didn't buy many of those books. Like 3.0, 4e improved on prior eds, this time with a bit more innovation, so I was happy to adopt it - I'd've been happier if 3e had gotten the full 10 year run that both eds of AD&D had, but 8 was pretty close. Unlike 3.0 or 4e or even 3.5, Essentials actually managed to make the game worse, so I didn't adopt it, though I've had to play with a lot of it in organized play, which has degraded that experience a bit.What's more, it's made even more ironic by the fact that you use that to prop up your own subjective bias for a particular edition.
I take D&D like I do other games, on their merits. I /do/ tend to be cynical, and to judge a game very critically at first, so 3.0 and 4e both had to be real improvements for me to take them up, and they were. 5e will have to pass the same test. It'll have to be better than 4e. So far, in my cynical/critical mode I see almost nothing in the actual playtest to make me think that might be the case, and, of course, I discount the voluminous 'vaporware' that's the only other thing we have to go on.