I'm coming from the plain factual angle that D&D does not automatically include collaborative world-building, any more than Baseball automatically includes Frisbees.
I think a less snide and more appropriate question for this particular thread, is whether 'sandbox'
automatically excludes collaborative world-building.
Or we could carry on with another 8 pages of you attempting to muddy the waters.
There's nothing "wrong" with playing such a game. To assume that everyone else in a discussion of Baseball happens to have Frisbees in mind, though, would be confusing and remarkably odd.
Almost as odd as these incredibly irrelevant-yet-condescending analogies you keep trying to pass off as wisdom.
The particular case is especially strange because
(A) Snoweel makes dogmatic assertions as to what "sandbox" means
Cite?
I'm asking the questions mate, and attempting to clarify your vague and evasive answers.
(B) The only practically useful meaning I have encountered is "a game set up basically as described for old D&D"
Well since some of us don't have the same old-skool credibility or right to an opinion as you, could you explain why this is any more helpful, or even correct, as a definition than just clearly stating what is and isn't allowed?
I only just yesterday found out that collaborative world-building = badwrongsandbox, which surprised me since I thought we had the term more-or-less pinned down.
(C) Snoweel -- along with others propounding intentionally impractical definitions -- seems not only directly hostile to that game form but not to have much of a clue as to what it's all about.
Maybe you should be clearer instead of inventing new and pointless analogies.
So far the only position I've seen approaching consensus is that sandbox is a theoretical absolute, and even then a couple of posters disagree.
As for hostility, get over yourself. Ariosto =/= 'sandbox' so try and be a bit objective. There is no reason for anyone to be hostile to a play-style we can't even satisfactorily define, and besides, people will play how they play, regardless of what they call it.
Which brings me back to the key point. This is entirely a matter of terminology; what exactly is a 'sandbox' and can it only be defined by what it isn't?