Who Actually Has Time for Bloated Adventures?

I mean, there's definitely faster systems out there, but in comparison to games like D&D 5e, I'm pretty sure that's only said by people who have already internalized the latter's ruleset.

Sure. I mean, among other things some games are pretty much resolving most of a fight with one roll, and some games are light to the point of schematic. But honest to the gods, I don't remember OD&D fights being much faster that PF2e ones, and there's a lot more nuance to the latter.
 

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But honest to the gods, I don't remember OD&D fights being much faster that PF2e ones, and there's a lot more nuance to the latter.
Spells could shut down an encounter with one roll. That element is largely gone these days. (For better or worse.)
But I think another factor is that I simply don't have the time I used to. When I was playing AD&D in the 80s and 90s, I didn't have a job, mortgage, wife, kid, etc. My sessions weren't also limited to less than 3 hours whenever we could all dodge responsibilities and get together. You want to get efficient because you're competing with video games that are more immersive than Pac-Man. A few dud sessions aren't a big deal, but a campaign that grows boring is.
Time seems to get more precious as you get older. You bury friends who never got to finish that campaign with you.
 

I get the latter; I'm 65 and I've lost four good gaming friends over the years, two just in the last couple years.

But that said--I mean you have the time you have but I just can't imagine getting any kind of game experience I'd care about about in 3 hours. If that was the best I could manage I'd just give it up and find something else to do with the time. But I'm not going to say my expectations are typical here, especially for the D&D-sphere.
 







I get the latter; I'm 65 and I've lost four good gaming friends over the years, two just in the last couple years.

But that said--I mean you have the time you have but I just can't imagine getting any kind of game experience I'd care about about in 3 hours. If that was the best I could manage I'd just give it up and find something else to do with the time. But I'm not going to say my expectations are typical here, especially for the D&D-sphere.
in high school, we got by with 30 min of a 40 min lunch period... 4 or 5 days a week.
For many years, 5-6 hours was my norm. Now, I'm happy to see 3.5; I don't have access for longer.
 

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