Nightfall said:Wingsword,
Just face, Greg is a greybeard.
Nightfall,
Just make sure you smile when you say that

Nightfall said:Wingsword,
Just face, Greg is a greybeard.
Well, with "deluxe" I mean something that's not so common anymore today: some nice large foldout maps and some relevant maps and artwork within the book.Ranger REG said:Heh. I have never heard of a "deluxe" setting book, at least one published by WotC. Heck, not even TSR.
Pretty much. I don't buy books to replicate content I already have. I want new, cool stuff. And settings is one of the (few) things that TSR did right. Bring 'em back, and you'll have loads of happy customers.Turjan said:Just to make that clear: I'm not criticizing that WotC publishes more and more books that resemble prior 3rd party offerings. It's just the case that those WotC books are often not very interesting for owners of those 3rd party harbringers. I suppose that's what tetsuijn meant in the first place.
See: ExaltedTurjan said:But many people are. Many people don't like it to have their settings diluted in concept by a constant flood of supplements.
Ah, heck yeah! Whilst I do like Mulhalrond and the South, the North, the Silver Marches, and the Dales are the heart of the Realms. If you're playing anywhere else, you're kind of missing out on what makes the Realms the Realms.The original Forgotten Realms were a very nice setting. If you look at today's polls, it's still the North or the Silver Marches that get the most votes, except that you will hear remarks that those regions got unnecessarily cluttered with detail.
It got diluted. And worse, it got heroic. Not in a "We're the heroes struggling against a grim world" way, but in a "We've made it green!" way. Blech.Dark Sun also suffered from that fate. The original boxed set is a wonderful setting. Just look at that evocative map sheet with details from the city of Tyr. Later on, metaplot and clutter struck, and it wasn't such a strong idea anymore.
And even for Eberron, the thing I love about is that I don't need to buy an endless supply of books to have fun with it. The core really is very complete, and leaves things vague enough that I can do what I want with it, without having to worry about setting bloat.If you just have one book and, perhaps, a single adventure, that's most of the time enough support for a setting. Long going series of supplements should be confined to the generic stuff, like Greyhawk and Eberron.
Greg K said:Nightfall,
Just make sure you smile when you say that![]()
mhacdebhandia said:It's funny, actually, that you talk about "anime" inspirations (which I must say, in the interests of full disclosure, I absolutely don't see in revised Third Edition products - and I would see it if it were there, because I'm severely allergic to anime) and then mention you'd consider buying Complete Warrior, which is one of the only revised Third Edition supplements I can think of that arguably takes any inspiration from anime movies and shows - the kensai prestige class.
In any case . . . D&D shouldn't restrict itself to the tired imitations of Tolkienesque pseudo-medieval fantasy that was its stock in trade in the Seventies and Eighties. There's actually nothing wrong with taking inspiration from other areas of speculative fiction - whether it be old-school Howard-and-Leiber sword-and-sorcery or truly contemporary fantasy with a "modern" attitude towards weirdness and variety.
tetsujin28 said:See: ExaltedAh, heck yeah! Whilst I do like Mulhalrond and the South, the North, the Silver Marches, and the Dales are the heart of the Realms. If you're playing anywhere else, you're kind of missing out on what makes the Realms the Realms.
It's the dilution of a strong idea by too much unnecessary material. Why not make something about Vesh? Something that fits the idea of the setting? But no, we see lots of change to make it "interesting". Bah!Nightfall said:No...I think what killed it was the fact there was zippo communication between various parties about what the Scarred Lands was and thus there was a hard time building between what the Scarred Lands was. Metaplotting didn't kill it. (Didn't help it I'll grant you but didn't kill it either.) Various sourcebooks that controdicted themselves didn't. It was just no consenus about where the Scarred Lands was going OR how to keep it together.
I didn't confuse that. I just saw you as an advocate for changes that destroyed the orignal theme of Athas, and I pointed to changes that destroyed the original theme of the Scarred Lands and lead to a loss of the customer base. I thought you could somehow relate to this example of where changes like this often leadThis is of course my biased opinion but don't confuse my "Dark Sun should evolve like the rest of us." with "Scarred Lands never changes."
tetsujin28 said:And settings is one of the (few) things that TSR did right. Bring 'em back, and you'll have loads of happy customers.