This is one funny thread. Early on when I saw Silverthrone's first coupla posts I reckoned it might get moderated pretty quickly but it's just descended into hilarity
Anyway, I have to take issue with Silverthrone's approach to 3e.
Silverthrone: I am, according to the tests, a genius. When I did virtually no work for my first year university exams, including for one module reading the book the course was based on for the first time only the day before the exam, I got a good 2/1 even on that little effort. But, according to you, because I like the fact that 3rd edition provides the rules for lots of situations that the previous editions just didn't cover, I'm a slack-jawed idiot who can't handle rpg's properly?
I love games with lots of rp'ing in. My favourite setting apart from my homebrews is Planescape, which tends towards roleplaying rather than combat. But combat is a perfectly valid method of playing D&D and always has been - hell, the earlier editions of D&D were just as focused, if not more, on dungeon crawling and getting lots of loot, and it took new settings to bring out the focus on other aspects of the game. Somehow praising earlier editions as a kind of rp'ing holy grail is rubbish; I don't doubt that many people might prefer the old rulesets but in no way does that therefore mean that 3e with its more comprehensive rules set, saving time for the DM and players and thus allowing more time for actually playing and enjoying the game, is somehow 'dumbing down' the game.
It sounds more like you don't want to admit that other people have perfectly valid methods of gaming, and always have done, and instead want to blame it on an easy scapegoat - 3e. People who focus far more on non-roleplaying aspects of the game have always existed.
Further, it seems like Limper's argument seems to have oscillated between two points throughout this discussion - on one hand he seemed to be indicating that he should get more XP for better roleplaying and the other guy should be kicked out for not being as good a roleplayer, and on the other hand he was saying that the guy was doing *nothing at all*. Now, in the second case I can sympathise; but in the first, I have my doubts simply because of the disruption it can, potentially, cause, and I've seen it occur amongst some gamers. Now that doesn't necessarily mean those gamers are slack-jawed idiots who shouldn't be playing, but rather that those individuals personalities, likes and dislikes mean that it isn't the way they like to play.
There is no One True Way of playing the game.