What is this?
I have never  read through, let alone play, the 4th edition of D&D. My experience  with D&D is limited to BECMI, 2E, and 3.0E. I'm currently using the Basic  fantasy RPG retro-clone rules to play D&D-style games.
Wizards  of the Coasts have released a free set of Quick Start Rules and a free full-sized  adventure available for download by anyone willing to check out the  4th edition of Dungeons and Dragons. I figured that, since these  materials are completely free of charge, they deserve, for the very  least, a read-through. I have read through both files - the Quick Start  Rules and the Keep on the Shadowfell adventure - during the preceding  week, and now I will post my first impressions from reading them.
Things I liked
1) The overall  Quick Start rules are very clearly written for the most part. I find it  very easy to understand the game mechanics. Everything is laid out in  simple language and in a very readable format. In the first glance it  looks quite easy to learn and play. The rules look quite simple  (critical hits, for example, have been simplified to simple maximum  damage rather than different damage multipliers and chances per weapon  type; bull-rishes and grapples have been similarly clarified and  simplified). I hope this also holds true in the actual 4E rules.
2)  Attack powers no longer have saving throws; instead, the attacker rolls  an attack against a static defense rating (similar to how AC is handled  in 3E or 4E); there are four possible defenses - AC, Reflex, Fortitude  and Will. I like this as it looks quite logical and streamlines the  magic system as well.
3) Skills are simplified. If I understand this  correctly, instead of messing around with skill points (which was a bit  messy in 3E), your skill modifier simply equals your ability modifier  plus half your level (rounded down). There are also less skills than in  3E (which, IMHO, had too many of them) and the skills have been  consolidated. Feats seem to have been similarly simplified.
4) There  has been a significant effort to cut down on paperwork. Now most of your  powers are either At-Will (usable any number of times per day)  Encounter (usable once per encounter) or Daily (usable once per day).  Similarly, your HP recover completely after an Extended Rest. Therefore  things look easier to track than in older editions.
5) It seems as if  there was a conscious effort to cut down on the "15-minute adventuring  day" phenomenon. Not only are most powers usable once per encounter  (rather than a finite number of times per day), and not only is it easy  to heal during combat without needing expendable spells, but you  actually get benefits (Action Points) from doing multiple encounters per  day. I like that.
6) Leveling a character seems quite easy,  especially at odd levels. Just add a few bits here and there and you're  set, without much page-flipping. Am I correct?
7) Wizards finally can  fight with magic and only magic all day long, as some spells are  At-Will powers. This means that in 4E the wizard won't have to resort to  a crossbow or dagger after casting a few spells (which, in previous  editions, could be very few per day).
8) Minions. I love the concept -  expendable foot-soldier monsters easy to play and kill without much  accounting needed; it also highlights the "boss" monsters and focuses  the action on them. These rules also allows the Fighter to shine, with  all his At-Will powers that do additional damage to nearby monsters;  he'll reap through hordes of minions, which looks cool and heroic!
9)  The KotS adventure feels quite cool, and lets the players to do heroic  stuff (stopping a death-cult!) at mere level 3.
Things I didn't like
1) Wizard  spells have been narrowed down. One of the things I love about BFRPG (or  even 3E) Wizards/Magic-Users is their versatility in the hand of  creative players; in 4E it seems that most wizard spells are  combat-focused and seem to have narrow applications. I'd miss spells  such as Pyrotechnics, Obscuring Mist and so on which could be very cool  in the hands of crafty players...
2) Some of the monsters presented  in Keep on the Shadowfell look quite grindy. A lot of monsters have  quite a number of HP that the PCs have to chew through; the worst  offender is probably the Gelatinous Cube with its whopping 152 HP that  would probably take a very, very long time to kill at level 2-3. I hope  4E monster are not like that in general, as I don't want combat to  devolve into a boring series of round-after-round chopping with At-Will  powers for a large number of rounds.
Things I'm not so Sure About
1) I'm not sure how  heavily the 4E rules are tied to their fluff. Some of the fluff - such  as the planar cosmology and some of the races - is quite different from  the assumptions of previous editions and would be quite difficult to fit  into existing settings or campaigns (such as my Wounded Gaia setting). Could 4E be easily played  with different fluff, different races and/or different planar  cosmologies?
2) Healing Surges. They are a cute little game mechanic  which I like from a mechanical POV, but I'm not sure how I'd explain  them in-game; how are these wounds healed instantly without rest or  magic? Do all PCs regenerate? Could all PCs cast the equivalent of Cure  Light Wounds a number of times per day?
3) Combat is designed for  miniatures and a grid. A grid has the advantage of being easy to convert  between mini scales (I like 15mm personally rather than the standard  28mm scale), but it means that you need to organize a grid in order to  play (rather than play off-the-cuff).
4) Characters apparently start  the game with a lot more HP on level 1 than in any previous edition. On  one hand, this makes them more fit for heroic adventuring (and reduces  their chances of being killed by weak opponents), but on the other hand  it might greatly affect the feel of a low-level game.
5) What is  "Passive Perception"? The quick-start rules refer to it, but it is not  explained. Is that simply a Perception skill roll made by the DM, or  something else?
6) Monster stat-blocks, while very readable in their  format, are quite long. I like the BFRPG stat-blocks which fill one or  two rows of text; the 4E stat-blocks are quite hefty, and seem quite a  chore to write during prep.
7) The quick-start rules say that they  are best suited for a party of 5 players. This might be a problem for  me, as I usually can arrange for about 2 players in an average game. Is  the game playable with smaller parties, such as 1-3 PCs?
The Bottom Line
I think that the 4E  rules, as presented in the Quick-Start Rules, are quite well-written  and well-designed. However, I do have my reservations about them,  especially in regard to the required party size, the limits placed in  wizards and the potential for grind.
 
Chello!
ReplyDeleteI bought all the rules through the release of PHB2. I really tried to like it, but it was truly D&D: The MMO. I second what you say about the Grind; and the few times I did play it it seemed like I was playing City of Heroes.
Yep, grind and the requirement for a large and varied group (with complementary PC roles) are my main two stumbling blocks on the road to 4E. Right now I'm enjoying BFRPG (which is a retro-clone of 1E with some 3E elements thrown in for good measure), and it is far from grindy and very playable with small and weird groups (such as 1 Magic-User and 1 Cleric). If I am to convert to 4E I'd have to address these concerns.
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