the 2e settings are on the DMsGuild, most of the bigger ones also are open for 5e products, DS might be the last holdout on that.If it were up to me, I would just release all the 2E settings to the DMsGuild and let the oldies play with them. Then I would hire some people born in this century and get THEM to innovate for me.
I dare you to look up when most influential artist types created their most interesting works.As to people born in this century innovating, they are what, at most 25?
Yeah, but you know what you like and tend to have more money to spend on those things.I dare you to look up when most influential artist types created their most interesting works.
Hint: when you are old,you aren't generally innovative.
Let the "kids" set the tone. Ignore the oldies.
I'm just saying that D&D needs some serious infusion of creativity and us GenXers (like Crawford and Perkins) aren't managing it.Yeah, but you know what you like and tend to have more money to spend on those things.
But... Gone are my days of buying everything, so maybe target those people that do by having those people's contemporaries make the things. Maybe I'm just old and not needed except to pay taxes.
When, in the Renaissance? Today you tend to go to univeristy etc., so yeah, they barely come online nowI dare you to look up when most influential artist types created their most interesting works.
20 to 25 is not what I consider oldHint: when you are old,you aren't generally innovative.
I do not see inexperience as the hallmark of quality, maybe you doLet the "kids" set the tone. Ignore the oldies.
When you look at people in the arts doing things that are innovative, you see 20-somethings.When, in the Renaissance? Today you tend to go to univeristy etc., so yeah, they barely come online now
20 to 25 is not what I consider old
I do not see inexperience as the hallmark of quality, maybe you do
As I said before, how DS did in the past is irrelevant, because current D&D players weren’t born then. It is in effect a new setting using themes that were ahead of their time in the 1980s, but are very topical now.
Anyway, I rate the probability of WotC using the slipcase approach for any setting ever again slightly less than zero. DS may only be one book without an accompanying big adventure, but it sure won’t be a slipcase.
When you look at people in the arts doing things that are innovative, you see 20-somethings.
That you think you have to be old to impact the arts world ignores huge swaths of reality. Yes, some artists make impacts when they are older, but not many.
We should trust the people of the generation to sell to the generation, and our generation is functionally irrelevant.
hahaha, omg... what is happening here...?Hint: when you are old,you aren't generally innovative.