It’s fortunate that Wizards of the Coast can’t keep it in their metaphorical pants and keeps trying to go for all of the money in the most obnoxiously predatory ways and has done so since at least 4th edition and its attempt at a virtual tabletop monopoly and “blind bag” miniature peddling.

I need to train myself to stop saying “D&D” for tabletop fantasy games because I am not going back again. I left before, and this time it’s permanent. Fuck WOTC. guts-rage

  • Belly_Beanis [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    1 month ago

    Have you tried not playing D&D?

    But yeah I really wish WotC would hurry up and die. The reserve list and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. I think the only reason they haven’t gotten rid of it (even though they flirted with $300 proxy boosters lmao) is because a bunch of employees have retirement funds set up in Magic cards. They’ll all cash out together at the same time because there aren’t any laws against insider trading when it’s children’s toys.

    • UlyssesT [he/him]@hexbear.netOP
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      1 month ago

      Have you tried not playing D&D?

      In case this is a good faith question and not smuglord posting, yes. I don’t play it anymore and haven’t in years. I play Paizo games instead.

      • Belly_Beanis [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        1 month ago

        It is absolutely not a good faith and is a shit talking question in TTRPG groups lol (like how former smokers can be). I’m just meme’ing you.

        Srsly tho D&D is kinda mid when it comes to RPGs. I never got into it because it always felt too generic. Part of that is because D&D is where a lot of fantasy tropes originated, part of it is because it is just generic not-Tolkien high fantasy. Actual game mechanics are handled by other systems a lot better. D&D requires so much home brewing by the DM it’s like why I am paying WotC for these rules?

        Unfortunately popularity means more accessibility when it comes to learning how to play. There’s hundreds of channels dedicated to D&D tutorials, not to mention the more professional improv stuff. Trying to find content on Trudvang Chronicles as a counter example can be a real pain in the ass, especially if you’re trying to get friends to try something new.

        It’s like how Warhammer is synonymous with tabletop wargames and people think it’s the entire hobby. There’s better and cheaper miniature manufacturers making better games, but they don’t have the same presence on YouTube or Instagram. D&D is that for RPGs or Magic for card games.

        • UlyssesT [he/him]@hexbear.netOP
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          1 month ago

          Srsly tho D&D is kinda mid when it comes to RPGs.

          astronaut-2 astronaut-1

          The main reason D&D was even a thing in my tabletop groups was brand recognition. It was very hard to get them to try, let alone consistently play, anything else. One time I miraculously got them to play the Heavy Gear RPG version that even Dream Pod 9 basically abandoned in favor of “clix” plastic trash.

          D&D requires so much home brewing by the DM it’s like why I am paying WotC for these rules?

          Very true. The resurrection system alone is such an unexamined society-breaking plot hole (why would anyone even worry about some king getting assassinated if the royal coffers could easily resurrect them in pretty much any reasonable circumstances, over and over and over?) that I tend to have to house-rule limitations on it or just abolish it altogether for death (and life) to have any reasonable tension in the setting. Left as-is, funerals are like a mockery of how poor a dead person is that can’t afford the rez toll and I could imagine some grieving friends and family sometimes threatening the clergy for their pay-to-play miracles.

          I still have to call Pathfinder “D&D” around my group.