The tragedy of 4th edition.

Status
Not open for further replies.

log in or register to remove this ad



To me, the real tragedy is that OD&D, 1E, 2E, 3E and 3.5 never met the "tragically low" quality standard of 4E. I guess D&D just isn't the game if you want editing perfection.

If you don't have anything on topic to say would you mind not posting unprovoked and irrelevant attacks on other editions?
 



If you don't have anything on topic to say would you mind not posting unprovoked and irrelevant attacks on other editions?

All I'm saying is that when you've been burned five times before, maybe putting your hand in the fire for the sixth time isn't the best course of action. D&D has been amateur hour for 30+ years now (which really says something about the industry in general if it's the top dog), and you didn't pay attention to the precedent set by previous publishing efforts.

Caveat emptor and all that.
 

All I'm saying is that when you've been burned five times before, maybe putting your hand in the fire for the sixth time isn't the best course of action. D&D has been amateur hour for 30+ years now (which really says something about the industry in general if it's the top dog), and you didn't pay attention to the precedent set by previous publishing efforts.

Caveat emptor and all that.

So according to you its perfectly OK for D&D to have bad editing and broken rules?
Thats not very convincing.
 

So according to you its perfectly OK for D&D to have bad editing and broken rules?

I never said it was okay. I just said it's nothing new, surprising, or unexpected. It's like a vicious dog that has already bitten you five times... if you let it in a sixth time, the odds favor you ending up with some bite marks.
 


Status
Not open for further replies.
Remove ads

Top