Sing it with me:
You take the good
You take the bad
You take them both
and there you have...
The facts of liiiiiiiiiife, the facts of liiiiiiiiiiiiiiife!
I think it is a matter of focus. If a designers attention is brought to an issue before release, he can address it. Otherwise, he might not.<snip>
The more people focus on a given topic, the more synergy that occurs and the more inconsistencies or questions can arise.
I do not consider it carelessness when a rule is not perfect. I consider it human nature.
I think the designers often mean something specific and do not necessarily think of all of the ramifications at the time.
With regard to the RAW issue, the rules are there for a reason: to be used by people to play the game. Modifying those rules is fine. Interpreting them in "your way" is fine.
But, the closer a given campaign is to a "reasonable" interpretation of RAW, the easier it is for new players to the group to understand the rules. The more unusual RAW interpretations and the more house rules a given campaign has, the more difficult for new players to correlate what is written in the rules with how the game is being played.
Mucho truth in your post besides what I quoted, KD!
Part of my use of the pejorative "carelessness" in this discussion is predicated upon my experience with another WotC procuct, M:TG. Too many times, they used the same language on newer cards that was used in prior
banned cards.
But part is based on my experience with the 3.X rules themselves, like the distinction that they insist on making between humanoids' unarmed strikes and other creatures' natural weapons...when humanoids' unarmed strikes fit the very PHB glossary definition of natural weapons.
So, don't take it too personally.
From my side, I have always taken it as my personal responsibility as a playtester to not only test the mainstream stuff, but also to push the system or setting to its extremes to see what rattles, and I encourage fellow playtesters to do the same.
But it is absolutely true that no amount of playtesting, however rigorous, will uncover all the flaws. I wouldn't be horribly surprised if someone sat down with 1Ed tomorrow and found a rules flaw nobody else had noticed...
After all, I've seen the same kind of thing in RW legal systems which get a LOT more closely scrutinized. I was in my 1st year of law school when an ESL student proposed a particular reading of a bit of Texas Criminal Law (in open class) to the professor...who had been part of the revision comittee that had just completed work on that section of the law a couple of years previously. He stopped, looked at it, and said that it was a perfectly valid reading...and he would be making some phone calls that afternoon.