“I know. But I would much prefer if I didn’t have to change the rules. Unfortunately, I do, because they stink.”
Complaining about the rules is the only way we as players can effect the change for future editions. Developers listen to communities.
Yes you can homebrew your own solutions and rule changes. But if it was that easy to just create new complex systems, we wouldn’t need to pay people to do it. Changing core rules can really bork a game’s balance and have huge knock-on effects that aren’t foreseen without significant play testing. It’s also really hard to know what rules need to be changed and to what without being a game developer.
You can also switch systems. For something like D&D 5e <-> PF2e that’s not a huge learning curve. But to other systems or from other systems? It can be a LOT of work on the GM and players part to completely reset their game, learn a new system, buy books, etc. For a lot of tables this might kill a game.
In the end, we should be telling the game’s creators what rules are bad and if we can, how we’d like them changed. And we should complain, Loudly, if they ignore a community’s feedback or make changes that seem worse. Players don’t always know what’s best in game design, but they can at the very least tell developers what they don’t like. And they should.
We WISH that WotC listened to their community.
At the very least they used to, which is why there’s such a flip between 4e and 5e.
Though ironically there’s a lot of stuff people complain about in 5e where the fixes they propose are basically 4e.
Ooh such as? I’m curious!
People complain a short rest at one hour is too long. 4e had it at like 5 minutes.
People complain martials mostly just do their basic attack. 4e had every class have cool powers on the same recharge cadence. This also helped address the martial caster divide.
The other day I saw someone iteratively come up with “the attacker should always roll instead of confusingly sometimes the defender rolls. You could figure out like an AC for reflexes and fortitude and roll against that”. Which is how I believe 4e worked.
It didn’t have bounded accuracy, so changes to that tend to reinvent 4e, 3e, or Pathfinder.
That’s off the top of my head. I’m sure there’s more.
That’s a good point, and really loved how balanced the three defenses were in D&D 4E, as well!
That being said, sometimes the rules just suck and it would be better for everyone involved if they weren’t the way they are
There’s personal preferences, and then there’s needlessly complicated or lacking mechanics and poor balance.
Time to whip out the Oberani Fallacy again.
Here, take a gander at this forum post from 2002.
This my my [sic] take on the issue.
Let’s say Bob the board member makes the assertion: “There is an inconsistency/loophole/mechanics issue with Rule X.”
Several correct replies can be given:
“I agree, there is an inconsistency/loophole/mechanics issue with Rule X.” “I agree, and it is easily solvable by changing the following part of Rule X.” “I disagree, you’ve merely misinterpreted part of Rule X. If you reread this part of Rule X, you will see there is no inconsistency/loophole/mechanics issue.” Okay, I hope you’re with me so far. There is, however, an incorrect reply:
“There is no inconsistency/loophole/mechanics issue with Rule X, because you can always Rule 0 the inconsistency/loophole/mechanics issue.” Now, this incorrect reply does not in truth agree with or dispute the original statement in any way, shape, or form.
It actually contradicts itself–the first part of the statement says there is no problem, while the last part proposes a generic fix to the “non-problem.”
It doesn’t follow the rules of debate and discussion, and thus should never be used.
Simple enough
“Don’t like the food you were served? Just go back to the kitchen and make your own.”
“It’s focking RAW! You donkey!”
I mean, I’d suggest starting by not ordering food you don’t like…
When every damn person in the country only eats that one food, that gets a bit hard.
I’ve never had any troubles getting my tables to play something else by asking, but my condolences if you’ve had a different experience.
I am referring more to LFG
I’ve usually gone with “meet people, make friends, introduce blades in the dark” rather than trying to find other bitd players.
I don’t find it as difficult as it used to be just to find people who knew what an RPG was at all, that may influence my perspective. I’m just happy the hobby is healthy
Yeah if my group weren’t smart enough to see how absolute shit 5e was after i brought up alternatives i don’t think I’d still be playing ttrpgs today.
There is a point where you go “Why did I pay for a book and then just change all the rules? Should just have made my own game.”
That’s exactly why I used the SRD for years. I only ever bought the books for the lore after seeing them in the store and seeing they had more than just rules in them.
This topic is often a good example of how people are more emotional than reasonable.
Someone will complain about all the things they don’t like about DND, but when presented with alternatives balk and stick to DND. The devil you know, the comfort of the familiar, whatever.
Which is fine, I guess. We all do that kind of thing. I’m just as emotional as anyone else.
Inertia is the world’s most powerful force.
It’s not a force though
That depends on your frame of reference.
Learning a new RPG system is a big time sink. Maybe if you keep searching you can find one perfect for you, but it’s easier to stick with the most famous one that everyone else already knows, and then add in tons of homebrew to fix the flaws.
This is kind of a cliché, but the counter argument is that many systems other than DND are easier to learn.
You’re not entirely wrong, but you are kind of describing the sunk cost fallacy.
If the extra enjoyment of a new RPG isn’t worth the cost to learn more systems until you find a better one, it’s rational to stick to D&D. Sunk cost fallacy is when you stick to it even though it’s not rational.
It’s probably worth learning some simple systems, but if you want crunch, is it really worth going through the effort of learning GURPS even though you don’t know if you’ll enjoy it any more?
Though the biggest problem is finding someone else to play it. Everyone plays D&D, so even if it’s not as good they’ll stick to that. I could learn a new system and enjoy it, but it’s all for naught unless I can find other people to play it with me.
I concede that it’s hard to find people to play other systems, but not impossible.
I don’t think “I shouldn’t read this system because I might like it less” is very sound. If you applied that to everything, no one would try anything new. Why listen to a new band when Mozart is fine?
I will die on the hill that DND 5e is actually pretty bad, though. It’s complicated in all the wrong ways, the combat is surprisingly shallow most of the time, the adventuring day tries to force it into very specific cadences, it’s shallow in its customization, it has a martial caster divide problem, the math is bad (flat probability can fuck itself), the magic system is incoherent, its support for the non combat “pillars” is lackluster… Pretty much every single part of the game makes me grind my teeth.
The only thing going for it is it’s popular, and it’s shallow in some ways that sometimes make it hard to make an ineffective character.
Honestly 5e has a bit of an identity crisis. It’s trying to go just there enough to support players who want a more generic fantasy adventuring game, and just trad enough to not scare off the people who want the D&D Experience:tm: as it was in the 80’s.
You’d be surprised how fast and easy to learn TTRPGs can be. Compared to what’s available, DnD 5e is actually on the crunchier side (upper mid range overall)
I don’t remember the last time I’ve ran a game RAW. There’s always a tweak or two that’s useful to customize things for each table.
Picking a ttrpg system (or a computer game engine) is about finding something that does as much of the work you don’t want to do for you. If a system doesn’t do much of the stuff you want it to, find a different system. If it does a bunch but has just a few things you don’t like, it may still be worth spending some time fixing the parts you don’t like. Or if the parts that are bad are also the parts you want to do for yourself anyway, then go for it.
There’s arguments about systems because different DMs have different design strengths, weaknesses, and goals, and what you’re looking for in a system changes from person to person.
And then the meta-rule for engine selection is, the best system in the world doesn’t matter if no one plays your game. So if your party is only interested in D&D or rules light systems or whatever, don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good.
I don’t want to change them. I want to smell the stinkiness. 😤