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I can't even remember my twenties, and my thirties are blurry at best. So I'm as veteran as the next person, probably more so.
And I welcome this change.
Honestly, you people are such complainers. I've played Warhammer with Reign, when I wanted something with grand scale mechanics, with Castle Falkenstein when I wanted a quick, narrative-based game, and The Riddle of Steel (which I wrote masses of WH rules for) when I wanted the ultimate in realism.
All different systems, all better than the painful % based WFRPG original (which love as you may, is far from realistic or balanced) and all tailored with minimum effort to give the best playing experience for my group.
If this is fast and flexible, I'm in. The story is more important than buckets of dice, maths and page-flipping.
If it's not, I carry on playing Warhammer however I please. And so can you. There are tens of thousands of pages of Warhammer background online and offline that you can get a hold of very easily. And your imagination *should* have no limits.
At the end of the day, if the doomsayers are correct, FFG will be the only losers. You can all carry on playing 2E while they lose money.
If not, don't let your laziness blind you to what could be a good game.
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cegorach said:
All different systems, all better than the painful % based WFRPG original (which love as you may, is far from realistic or balanced) and all tailored with minimum effort to give the best playing experience for my group.
"Far from realistic or balanced" is precisely why I love the original system. Can't say I've ever found it painful at all.
"D&D Characters Die Frequently. If you and your players refuse to embrace this axiom, you fall prey to an invulnerability that renders all the dangers impotent. You simply reenact plots knowing that the hero always survives and wins. ::yawn:: But in accepting it you spring headlong into a world of thrills n chills where failure and death are ever-present possibilities, surmounted only by the now-classic resolution: create another heroic wannabe and try to do better." -Frank Mentzer.
cegorach said:
If not, don't let your laziness blind you to what could be a good game.
It's not really laziness so much as it's the $100 price tag.
"D&D Characters Die Frequently. If you and your players refuse to embrace this axiom, you fall prey to an invulnerability that renders all the dangers impotent. You simply reenact plots knowing that the hero always survives and wins. ::yawn:: But in accepting it you spring headlong into a world of thrills n chills where failure and death are ever-present possibilities, surmounted only by the now-classic resolution: create another heroic wannabe and try to do better." -Frank Mentzer.
Sythorn said:
That's great, and of course you know the new edition has nothing to do with you using those rules? Some people don't around here apparently.
Sythorn said:
Now that's a good concern, and one I wish people would separate from the moaning about 'betrayal' etc. etc.
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Sythorn said:
It's not really laziness so much as it's the $100 price tag.
This $100 price tag is a major sticking point. If the Core Game was priced at about $50 then it would fly off the shelves, because it would be cheap enough to be worth the risk of buying a poor game vs. the chances of getting a good game. But at $100 I'm really having to think this one over. It feels like too much to invest in a game for which I have serious misgivings.
Consider the price tag a bit of free education. LEARN about a product before you buy it. Don't rush in. You are welcome. Good day.
E
In Sigmar's name I smiteth thee, thrice acursed daemon!
ejacobs said:
Consider the price tag a bit of free education. LEARN about a product before you buy it. Don't rush in. You are welcome. Good day.
E
RPGs are funny in that research doesn't help as much as one might think. No amount of reading about a game can prepare you for actually playing it. A perfect example, for me at least, is Reign and the One Roll Engine; I read a lot about it before actually trying the game and it turned out to be nothing like I was imagining.
"D&D Characters Die Frequently. If you and your players refuse to embrace this axiom, you fall prey to an invulnerability that renders all the dangers impotent. You simply reenact plots knowing that the hero always survives and wins. ::yawn:: But in accepting it you spring headlong into a world of thrills n chills where failure and death are ever-present possibilities, surmounted only by the now-classic resolution: create another heroic wannabe and try to do better." -Frank Mentzer.
cegorach said:
Sythorn said:
That's great, and of course you know the new edition has nothing to do with you using those rules? Some people don't around here apparently.
Of course I realize that, I was mearly responding to your statement that the percentile system was painful and had problems, because that statement isn't true for a lot of us.
"D&D Characters Die Frequently. If you and your players refuse to embrace this axiom, you fall prey to an invulnerability that renders all the dangers impotent. You simply reenact plots knowing that the hero always survives and wins. ::yawn:: But in accepting it you spring headlong into a world of thrills n chills where failure and death are ever-present possibilities, surmounted only by the now-classic resolution: create another heroic wannabe and try to do better." -Frank Mentzer.
cegorach said:
At the end of the day, if the doomsayers are correct, FFG will be the only losers. You can all carry on playing 2E while they lose money.
Yoy seem to forget that 2E will loose support and new suplements. They are far from the only loosers.
Well, we can produce our own game material for 2e games in perpetuity. FFG will actually lose something if the new version doesn't do well. Personally, if the went the 4e route in their thinking, I'd be happy enough to see the whole thing sink like a lead balloon. Not because of any personal desire to see FFG harmed, but because if a few RPG developers lose out big after jamming a finger in the eye of their existing fan base, other companies might think twice before doing the same thing.
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