And here comes the resident contrarian with a list of bullet points again grin grin grin Just kidding.

Originally Posted by RagnarokCzD
Did they tho?

Originally Posted by The Composer
[quote=Swen Vincke - Source from last month ]We want to have that Dungeons & Dragons feeling, not slavishly following every single one rule, but really getting the feeling of playing this tabletop experience but everything is being done for me, this dungeon master is doing everything automatically, I'm just having a good time.

I'm pretty certain that's exactly what happened in the previous games too? Certain things were changed to better adapt to a video game format. Apparently nobody had a good time in BG1 & 2.

Originally Posted by Swen Vincke - Source from October 2020
BG3 is based on the fifth edition [of D&D]. We started by setting out the ruleset very meticulously, and then seeing what worked and what didn’t work – because it is a videogame, and D&D was made to play as a tabletop game. So for the things that didn’t work, we came up with solutions.

See above.

Originally Posted by Swen Vincke - Source from October 2020
So what you can expect in BG3 is us giving you more tools to fool around with based on fifth edition rules and on some of the things that make the fifth edition so cool and accessible.

Originally Posted by Swen Vincke - Source from November 2020
Baldur’s Gate was the definitive D&D game of it’s generation, and that’s what we’re trying to create, but we’re also trying to make a good video game first and foremost, rather than a strict D&D adaptation.

To put it in D&D terms, we’re your dungeon master and this is our campaign that we’re running, so there will be our own flavour and house rules. We’re bringing you one particular visualisation of this world, but that doesn't mean that there cannot be others.

Strange thing to say. So BG1 & 2 weren't good video games? Lol. The previous games were not by the book adaptations either.

Originally Posted by RagnarokCzD
Seems to me like they were talking quite clearly about what they are cooking ...
But people heared the word "Lasagna" and refused to listen even rest of the sentence. -_-

As Tuco (i believe?) once said ... there is nobody more blind, then person who refuses to see.
Or was ti deaf? Dunno ...the point should be clear.

I'd say most of those quotes could be interpreted either way. They do not necessarily suggest dispensing with a whole of D&D mechanics and implementing home-brew though equally they can be interpreted as such. Depends on your reading of them I guess.