I can’t lie. I would pay to see Dennis Detwiller do this to Delta Green.If every popular RPG suddenly changed their games to all be about isekai'ed humans who become My Little Ponies and/or vending machines,
I can’t lie. I would pay to see Dennis Detwiller do this to Delta Green.If every popular RPG suddenly changed their games to all be about isekai'ed humans who become My Little Ponies and/or vending machines,
All good. For what it's worth, I do think the 2024 books are a little more complicated than new art and layout. I don't think it is as big as a new edition, and I don't think using decimal values is overly helpful, but I think having the rules incorporating 10 years of design innovation is a net benefit.My apologies.. I was trying to read through this incredibly long thread while also look like I was working. I misinterpreted your comment.
No announcement, but it seems probable that it will work similarly to Volo's Guide to Monsters and Mordenkainen's Tome of Foes being marked as "Legacy" content. I would expect the new Core books to be seperate purchases, same as Monsters of the MultiverseOf note, at some point I picked up the three core books on D&D Beyond. I don't have any direct plans to play 5e again, but they're there if something comes up. Has WotC announced any plans of what they're doing about the core books there, or do the new versions of the classes come at a cost?
Yeah, if it doesn't require pouring hundreds of dollars in donations to gain an advantage over others, or coerce you because otherwise it becomes unplayable. Like some so-called free-to-play online games do. Several evenings a month I look through https://ausscasinosanalyzer.com/free-spins-no-deposit/25-dollars to find my free sign up money. And this is what makes the game accessible to me. As for fans, well, that's another story. They decide where to spend their money themselves.That does necessarily make them a cash grab nor does it mean that it is not a value proposition for someone else. To me people are throwing around the words "cash garb" a little too freely. As far as I am concerned to qualify for a cash grab there has to be some element of deception or compulsion to the thing.
Someone jacking up the price of fuel in a shortage is making a cash grab.
I really do not see discretionally spending like D&D being susceptible to "cash grabbing". No one is making one spend the money and there are other things to spend it on.
I can see that corporations often exploit the fandom of rich fans but to me that is on the fan and is an unhealthy relationship on the part of the fan.