Happy Worldwide D&D Game Day!
The official Wizards of the Coast site notes that today is Worldwide Dungeons and Dragons Game Day. All day your Friendly Local Gaming Store will be running events using the D&D 3.5 rules, as well as skirmishes for Dungeons and Dragons minis. The official link there has downloadable character sheets if you want to go play, and the minis section of the site has rules and regs for the skirmish scenarios. The list of participating locations is available online ... so get rolling.
It's like Valentine's Day, but I'm taking part in it!
Anyone else think the comments just weren't rendering right before they turned off ABP and saw ads?
I just did a Saving Throw versus Angry Spouse and lost, so looks like I'll be cleaning out the garage, instead.
Vincent J. Murphy
Spandex Justice
a) Why must people invoke the version flame war?
b) Oh well, now it's invoked, might as well take part. 3.5ed is kinda iffy, and struck me as more of a recollection of all the errata into the core books than anything, but 3rd ed is no way just exploiting people for money. It's easily better than 2nd ed, which I found clunky and confusing as all hell. Down with 2nd ed, up with 3rd ed!
"16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
Now if only they had smell-o-vision for web sites, so those of us who can't attend could smell the unwashed bodies and Doritos...
I am having a great time since returning to play after twenty years. Some of us at work have a lunch session once or twice per week. I think DnD is going to be around forever because there is endless material and the rules just continue to build in order to give the game more things to track.
Click here or here.
Oh my god. A company trying to make money. Inconceivable!
Has anything really changed 2nd --> 3rd ? I don't think so. The system changed a bit, but the world stayed the same, and that's the only thing that matters.
Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
Well, when 3.0 came out and I went through the PHB, I freaking hated it as well. Then it started dawning upon me: I play games to have fun, not look up tables. These are a few reasons that crop up as to why I ended up preferring the 3.x line:
All in all, I'd call these very fundamental changes that justify a 3rd Edition, all of them perfectly sensible (unless you're the sort whose notion of fun involves looking up tables because the system can't be consistent). Granted, I still don't like the feat system, it feels tacked on, and way too artificial. But that's a small price to pay for all the pluses (and a powergamer's paradise too, to boot).
The... world? Dude, D&D IS the system. That's all it is, a book of game mechanics. What do you mean by "the world"?
"16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
I've been looking for a good game here for years.
kendall area.
They're using their grammar skills there.
all very good points, but my i refresh your memory ? The day 3rd edition came out wotc recalled all 2nd edition books, to destroy them, so you couldn't keep playing 2nd (that was what they hoped anyway) ... WTF ???
Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
You too can re-capture the magic of weekend-long game sessions with Mountain Dew Aftertaste, Unwashed Bodies Doritos!
I worked in a Comic and Card shop at the time 3rd Ed came out and there isn't a sinister reason behind the recall. The fact is, the recall was done to make sure that stores didn't refuse to carry 3.0 books due to having 2nd Ed books still. Our store was small and if the owner couldn't have ripped those covers and sent them in for credit, he wouldn't have ordered 3rd Ed until he was out of 2nd for certain.
Try Nearby Gamers.
Who said Freedom was Fair?
I work in a comic book store where one of these game days took place. The DM I had was good, but there was this really ugly fat chick who talked too much and had no idea what she was doing which was annoying. I didn't really mind the two kids and their father playing because I saw it as a good thing for them to be doing together and for the kids to get a taste of a different adventure. That said, the adventure itself was only combat, no puzzles, no roleplaying, barely any skill use. It was just fight after fight and though there was some cool treasure in the middle, the best stuff was at the end, which is kind of worthless since, well, it was the end and we can't really use it.
All in all I'm not sure if I feel it showed off the best of DnD however it did give people a chance to learn the rules in a setting with someone who knows them.
We met new people and some we already knew. The materials used where very high quality. The DM we had was tired but was very good. My kid went all googly eyed over the 4th edition stat card.
It was a good time and I think an OK turnout. Not spectacular, but better than I expected.