Doom wrote:Yeah, I think the asshanding, at least on RPGnet, comes for the asinine and craven moderation.
This is very true. If you make coherent arguments on rpg.net, you
will be flamed. Admitting that nWoD or 4e D&D are on the way out is for some reason taken as a great affront to the hugbox. You can get
banned for that shit.
As for the specific "This is WoW!" argument, it's basically two things:
- The authors made a set of rules that are built with the underlying assumption that you are playing an MMO. Monsters are written as if they spawned during combats and never even existed the rest of the time, interactions with the world are written with the assumption that you will always get the blue key to open the blue door and never do anything else.
- The authors specifically wrote in a lot of MMO flavor crap for the background, such as it is. The Eladrin are Blood Elves, they decided to try to get people talking about "roles" for their groups, and so on.
Now these are both preference deals. Either one can be answered with "I like WoW, 11 million people can't be wrong, STFU!" That's a valid response. It starts up the next chain of the argument "Why don't you just play WoW, then? I mean, it already exists." vs. the "I like to play in meatspace with actual people" retort.
But 4rries rarely go that route, probably because accepting the premise reduces the discussion to one of preferences where the original poster is therefore
correct in not liking 4e (gasp). Instead it then usually falls to the 4rries to make bizarre claims about superficial differences (these are
defenders, not
tanks) or tone deaf attempts to relate 4e design choices to past editions of D&D to claim that it isn't copying MMOs because D&D was always like that (2E AD&D had 4 basic classes, which is obviously equivalent to the 4 roles even though Barbarians used to be a branch off Fighter).
You can't win an argument of "compare meaningless superficial similarities between games neither of us play" against a 4rry. You can prove them wrong with page citations about individual assertions, but the argument at that point is so esoteric that no number of points of minutiae will make any real difference.
-Username17
-Username17