L
lowkey13
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So, if TSR writes a forward that says, "This is not a new edition," by this definition, it's not a new edition. Therefore, 2e is not a new edition.
On the other hand, if they explicitly number a new edition, it is a new edition, therefore 3.5 is a new edition (since it has a different number).
New edition or not...we can argue the semantics of it all day...I think the impact of 3.5 displays two important factors.
More books ultimately hurt.
Consumer perception can play a huge role.
Historically, viewing the D&D line, that is not correct.
2nd ed could not have been a .5 because back in 1989 the general game-playing public were not yet familiar with software versioning nomenclature, so would have been confused by a "2.5" edition.2e was similar to 1e, but added some major new systems like skills, cleric spheres, specialist wizards and the like. It might have been doable as a .5, but I'm okay with it as a new edition. 3e and 3.5 were sometimes hard to differentiate if 3.5 isn't said on the cover of a book. The changes were mostly very minor.
Also, a nitpick, some of your numbers are wrong: 4e wasn't published until 2008 (giving it 6 years and 3.5e 5), and BECMI was a replacement for the previous B/X, so should be split. Unless of course you want to count to when an edition ceased production, in which case your end-dates for 2nd Ed and 4e both need revising.