Dice4Hire
First Post
War of the Burning Sky
Become a Community Supporter for EN World at just $3 per month, and you get WoBS as a side benefit.
I knew that.

War of the Burning Sky
Become a Community Supporter for EN World at just $3 per month, and you get WoBS as a side benefit.
In technical documents, white space is an essential component of good layout. Used properly, it's not wasted space - it's good design which increases utility. (And, from actually running monsters straight from the MM, IMO it's good design.)
Thanks, but no thanks. Legibiity is a great draw of the 4E books for me. I really disliked 3.5's brown background, especially in the PHB, though later books were better, Eyestrain is not a desirable part of the D&D experience for me.
Yep, there's definitely personal taste involved. But I can say, for myself, I had to print out monsters ahead of time in 3e, but often don't bother with 4e. The stat blocks are legible at an arm's length, and the clean layout helps me keep track of where I am pretty well. So while I miss fluff, and earlier on I complained about its lack, I have learned that this way of doing things has its own advantages.Well, I think that it is a matter of personal tastes. I find the white space in 4e manuals to be truly excessive and I don't have any problems reading the 3.x manuals.
The layout in 4e is very legible, you'll get no argument from me.Yep, there's definitely personal taste involved. But I can say, for myself, I had to print out monsters ahead of time in 3e, but often don't bother with 4e. The stat blocks are legible at an arm's length, and the clean layout helps me keep track of where I am pretty well. So while I miss fluff, and earlier on I complained about its lack, I have learned that this way of doing things has its own advantages.
-O
By the way, the OP's standard for background rich monster books shouldn't be Privateer - it should be Black Industry/FFG. The monster books for Warhammer Fantasy/40K (Old World Bestiary, Creatures Anathema) are a notch above the Monsternomicon's.
I agree. Some DM's don't want "forced" fluff, but many do. I do. I can always change it. And more importantly, your point regarding newbies!
That's really the only thing I find lacking in the 4e MM format. A brief text description. Not every creature gets a picture, and sometimes the pictures they get are crap! (subjective, I know)
Of course, without a text description, the reader can't notice when the art doesn't match the text!A clever solution to an old problem!
The revelation there was that text meant to be read aloud is wasted on the majority of players. A good DM is telling the story, not reading it aloud. So essentially, I think that the 4e manuals intentionally stripped out things, like monster descriptions, that were meant to be read aloud as sort of a way of forcing the DM to improvise.
Look at the monster writeups in those books. You get four (sometimes five) monsters per PAGE! A statblock that is about eight lines, 2 columns, a paragraph, sometimes two, of information about the monsters and that's it.
Yet, B/E is heralded as one of the greats of the game. It was certainly the gateway game for many here. Obviously back in the early 80's when many of us got our start, we didn't need two or three paragraphs of nothing but fluff about a given monster. Why do we need it now?