Schmiegel said:
As far as Antistone's question...in a couple of weeks I'm going to be playing the signature quest from the Altar of Despair expansion, um "The Altar of Despair". With that, I will have played every official quest available for base Descent, some more than once. I also purchased the Quest Compendium, but have yet to play any of those. I'll turn to that next for base Descent. I've looked over some of the fan-created quests and have been generally impressed.
Interesting. Does that include the "bonus quests" The Aerie of Death , The Chase , and Cult of the 100 ?
Schmiegel said:
I think they could realistically have been expected to fix a lot of the reported problems before publication. Based on descriptions I saw posted, a lot of them should have been obvious from any honest playtest with a standard game set (like not having enough map pieces, missing the rune key for a door, etc.).
Releasing errata is certainly better than simply NOT releasing errata, but in my personal opinion, any major errata for a quest means it needs to be completely reprinted. A separate errata document is OK for rules, because you're ultimately going to memorize them anyway, and all players can work together to double-check each other; but for a quest, where only one person is allowed to see the document and they're probably reading it for the first time while they play, needing to cross-reference a separate errata sheet is unacceptable. If I had bought the Quest Compendium, I would probably create my own merged quest documents incorporating the errata and print them at my own expense rather than trying to play with the actual book I had bought, and that seems a pretty solid indication that the product is defective.
Of course, I wouldn't have bought the Quest Compendium even if it was perfect, firstly because I'm nowhere near to running out of vanilla quests, and secondly because I'm playing Enduring Evil anyway so I can't even make use of vanilla quests, but the problems with the compendium would constitute a third sufficient reason for me to not buy it.
I also saw some complaints that some of the "fixes" involved simply removing interesting-but-problematic parts rather than balancing them, though having never seen the originals I can't comment on that.
). I do think they'd be wise to try and keep as much compatible as possible (such as the scale like you mentioned), but I do think making a 2nd edition with some serious play testing and revision would really be the best next step for the game.