- Joined
- Dec 17, 2019
The worst part (besides the wokeshit) is that now you have two versions of the same books that are both too different and not different enough. It's not different enough to be considered worth purchasing for most players who are used to the original rules, but it's too different to really be compatible mixing the two at your table if someone does buy them. For example, the new classes are designed around various rules changes, so they won't work as well if you're still running 2014. Either everyone has to stick with the old rules or move to the new ones, and for people who already sunk money into even just a PHB, it's a tough ask to tell them to basically buy the same book again but worse.Even setting aside all the woke shit, the 5.5e just doesn't seem all that great. I read the /r OneDnd subreddit occasionally just to see what people are saying, and it mostly just seems like a resounding "Meh". WoTC wasn't willing to take any risks to alienate any of their current player base, while simultaneously not addressing any of the issues they had with 5e, so you just now have a mediocre product that's going to annoy current players, not offer anything new to newcomers and give a gigantic middle finger to the old guard. The only praise I keep seeing from every review and every person who picked up the books is "Well, the art is nice." (In my opinion its the worst its ever been, but people are free to be wrong.) If the most you can say about a $60, 400 page book is "Art Guud" then your product has some major problems. Usually when a TTRPG is successful how good the art is, is just a bonus or an afterthought.
Besides, you can just lift anything good from the 2024 rules and use it as homebrew. I don't know of anything specific, but I'd heard there were at least a couple things worth looking at. Certainly not enough to justify buying a whole new set of books, though.
Should've just bit the bullet and made 6e, honestly. Ten years is about as long as any version has had before it gets replaced, and it's pretty damn late to try fixing any of 5e's issues now. I get that they didn't want people to feel like all the books they bought were now worthless, but that didn't stop them from making new versions before. Then again, it's modern WotC, so I'm sure it would have turned out just as bad, if not worse.
e is to 5e, or 3.5 to 3.