1. I'm not using spreadsheets for gaming any more.
2. I'm DMing again.
3. My wife is playing again.
Seconded
1. I'm not using spreadsheets for gaming any more.
2. I'm DMing again.
3. My wife is playing again.
Do you remember the "No Snark" request in the first post?When badass goth devil chicks wearing hurtmewear becomes empowering to women.
Players not asking for XP, or being interested in plot development has little to nothing to do with what system you're running a campaign in. It has almost everything to do with having good players and having a good DM. If your players had that reaction to your last session, I have to congratulate you for being a really cool DM who hooked them, but don't water down your success by feeling it's due to a system change.
I've been hooked by a DM who ran various games in Alternity, Shadowrun 3rd, and D&D 3.0. Her ability to craft a wicked story and draw players in was independant of those systems, some of which are mechanical nightmares at times.
I'd like to think I've done a pretty good job with 3e, and I don't see anything improving or going downhill if I switched to 2e, 4e, or a deck of cards and a bent penny. Regardless of running 3e or 4e or Pathfinder or GURPS, I'll gloss around 90% of the system, and there won't be a single NPC with more stats behind the screen than story notes.
players are so immersed in ther story arc development that they forget to ask for XP, or leveling up!
So 4th edition was a success back in 1e?
Edit: I guess Shemmy's beaten me to the point.
Please note, the OP was apparently talking about his table. It is possible that only 4E changed something with his group. Or that he has the experience that a game has only "arrived" with his group if they stop thinking about XP and GP and focus on the story.
. . . I can create a player character that conforms to every last bit of my mental image after having owned the PHB for only two hours.
Wow, I wish I could do that. I tried for several hours, also after having read the book several times, to construct my first 3e character, but failed.
Rogue fit with most of it, but it plainly sucks that Rangers are the only two-blade wielders and they are strength based.![]()