this post was submitted on 12 May 2024
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I don't know, this doesn't sound very reflective to me at all. The poster is just making a lot of general statements about games it's not clear they've even played.
Every one of these games is as simple or as complicated as we want to make them. They can be pared down or beefed up at will. How much investment you need to make at the table is dictated more by who's sitting around it with you than what's printed in the book. And most of these games have much, much smaller books than 5e.
And the one that I play that doesn't, doesn't require any more investment than 5e if you don't want it to.
With less popular games, though, you tend to get more fanatical player bases. It may be harder as a lone player to find a chill table. But if your already chill table is trying to convince you to try something else...
Like, no one needs to play apologetics for 5e. It's the biggest TTRPG of all time. A case for it does not need to be made. The fans of every other game are just trying to sell their own interests to the largest known market for the genre, because they want people to play with, too. D&D does not need people to justify it in response.
He has been "playing one campaign or another since mid-2014". Also, "Of the last three years, one was spent entirely on a level 1-10 campaign of Pathfinder 2E, with the other two years jumping between Shadowdark, Mork Borg, Blades in the Dark, Monster of the Week, and finally a Heart: the City Beneath campaign that's ending next week."
Also, he writes "with the exception of PF2E, all the other systems I've tried are less mechanically demanding." So he seems to have at least a vague understanding of multiple systems. Enough to voice an opinion at least.