@AuldShaneGamer Not all that surprised unfortunately. The movie was fine, but when I saw it opening weekend the theater was ~75% empty. It just didn't pull general audiences in my opinion.
@AuldShaneGamer It might have been a disappointment after marketing costs (usually ~50% of movie budget). So after marketing, the movie probably cost roughly 225 mil. Against that number, the 208 mil box office is a pretty large failure.
If you're reading, wherever you are, next time you need to defend a multi-million dollar company please don't peddle nonsense about disciplines you have minimal understanding of. Plenty of experts will easily cut through your bs.
Amazing that all the "software engineers" insisting that it was impossible for Beyond to have 2014 and 24 spells at the same time on character sheets have all mysteriously gone quiet.
Almost like they never had any idea what the fuck they were talking about...
@AuldShaneGamer TLDR: I think use your best judgement on when to say no since there are valid times to do so. Important to also make sure you aren't saying "no" way more than you're saying "yes", lest you become an RPG horror story like above.
@AuldShaneGamer I once came across an online campaign where the DM decided to implement a racial caste system of all things. Essentially made it impossible to play any species aside from elf, human, gnome, or half-orc. We were literally told any other option would come with "super racism" 🤦
Last week we released a Changelog detailing how players would experience the 2024 Core Rulebooks on D&D Beyond. We heard your feedback loud and clear and thank you for speaking up.
Read the full update here: https://t.co/o6wDEwjBs1
the value of D&D beyond is its convenience
the ability to look up spells, features, classes, races, etc with a simple search/list
This is the polar opposite of convenient, it requires work on the user's part
They could easily include both iterations