Below are user reviews of Advanced Dungeons & Dragons Core Rules 2.0 and on the right are links to professionally written reviews.
The summary of review scores shows the distribution of scores given by the professional reviewers for Advanced Dungeons & Dragons Core Rules 2.0.
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User Reviews (1 - 11 of 13)
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Core Rules 2.0
5
Rating: 5,
Useful: 1 / 2
Date: May 20, 2001
Author: Amazon User
This product makes creating D&D characters fun, fast,and easy. It has acurate tools for upgrading characters, and creating new ones. Core rules also has easy to use DM tools for creating worlds and dungeons. It is a useful reference too, having 9 complete D&D books. I have yet to find a product to equal it.
An outstanding addition to the original Core Rules 2.0!
5
Rating: 5,
Useful: 4 / 7
Date: June 13, 2000
Author: Amazon User
And I thought the original AD&D Core Rules were great! This expansion allows you to do many times more than you could with the original. And, although you need the original Core Rules 2.0 in hand before you can install this expansion, the people at Wizards of the Coast have done it again with an "all-in-one" solution for every level of Dungeon Master.
5 Stars with a lot of qualifications
5
Rating: 5,
Useful: 35 / 35
Date: March 02, 2000
Author: Amazon User
After deciding to get back into D&D after a long layoff I went to a store to see if there were any new books I might want. I got this (AND the expansion) instead. As a DM, I can't get over how much time it saves me. It is great for generating NPC's and encounters, as well as maps. Since all the basic D&D books are available, looking up stuff (if you know where to go) is handy. And maintaining characters and printing out new records after going up a level (or other significant changes) is really wonderful (especially for my kids who aren't so good at keeping records). I am able to develop and maintain a much more detailed adventure world in a lot less time. And another big plus - there are quite a few web sites with stuff that can be downloaded and imported (npc's, monsters, magic items, maps, etc.). Doing it is easy.
Now for the drawbacks: First, it is pretty buggy. I downloaded the latest patches and upgrades from the web, and that helped a lot. But there are several places where it crashes, or does dumb things (like generate 2000 mind slayers for a random encounter).
The documentation is pretty useless. Most of the stuff is so straightforward that documentation is hardly necessary, but not so for Campaign Mapper. I can now say I like CM, but it took quite a bit of experimenting and correction of mistakes to get the hang of it.
This is NOT a game. It is simply a tool, primarily for DM's.
There aren't enough character portraits. You can add your own, or perhaps find some on the web to download. But given that most characters start young, there are scarcely any portraits of youth.
I have this vague feeling that it should do more. It doesn't really do anything that I can't do without a computer. But it sure does it faster and neater!
For quality, I'd only rate this 2 stars. I'd have been pretty embarrassed (I'm an applications developer) to put something out with this many bugs. I'm going to be checking their web site with some regularity for patches (and upgrades, hope, hope). But as to overall value to me as a DM, definitely 5 stars. It could be a lot better though, so if there were competing products I'd probably have to rate it 3 to 4 stars.
Signed, Karen's hubby
If you're into AD&D this software is a must have
5
Rating: 5,
Useful: 24 / 28
Date: November 05, 1999
Author: Amazon User
This Software for AD&D is a real must have. The first thing about this software is the ease of installing and use. Making Charters and editing them has gotten better in this one. Futher more Making monsters, NPC's, and simple maps with the map maker does get easer with use. There is one draw back though. The campain map maker is a bit diffacult to use and the Tutoral doesn't work in some of the early verisons, like the one I have, and you must download a patch to fix that problem.
Of course, in the expantion for 2.0, they rectife the problem.
If you are into d&d don't think twice on buying this.
5
Rating: 5,
Useful: 14 / 23
Date: January 14, 2000
Author: Amazon User
This is a must have if you are into d&d. t is great with or without the expansion pack. You can look up just about anything, and the mapmaker is a lot better then it used to be in version 1.0 . The graphics are better, and the charecter creation is a lot easier then before. But for those of you who are not very good at using computers you might have some trouble at first, but as you use ut more and more it is a lot better. Most people would say it is out of date, but I waited 20 days for this present from christmas of 1999 and it was well worth the 20 days of boring waiting
Nice addition to the Core Rules CD
4
Rating: 4,
Useful: 14 / 14
Date: October 06, 2000
Author: Amazon User
Core Rules 2.0 was a very useful support to a DM's bookkeeping. This expansion is a very useful support to a DM's bookshelf.
While there are a couple of useful new functions (party management and an Indoor tileset for the mapmaker), the biggest advantage to this CD is the fact that it includes most of the Race and Class handbooks WoC (then TSR) has put out to support the AD&D game. For [the money], this is a fantastic deal. The only drawback is it's tied to your computer. For those of us lucky enough to have a laptop, this is a must-buy. For others, it's still a healthy addition to your archives.
Nice expansion software
4
Rating: 4,
Useful: 4 / 12
Date: June 11, 2000
Author: Amazon User
This is a must have if you are a dongeon master. It simplifies greatly the job you have to do. The whole set of rules books is one of the many good things they added.
If you are a DM this is a must have.
4
Rating: 4,
Useful: 8 / 9
Date: March 02, 2000
Author: Amazon User
The Core Rules CD-ROM is a great utility for DM's. If you are a player, most of the stuff contained in it will be practically useless, except for the player creation and the books. If you are a player, the best thing to do is show this to your DM because it will be a bigger help to him than you. Actually, having your entire gaming group pitch in for this, so the DM can have a copy would probably be the best idea. The player creation is great. It simplifies the sometime long procedure of creating a character. And if you'd rather roll up your character with pencil, paper, and dice, you can still enter your character for a hard copy rather than having the computer roll it up for you. The map making utility is practically useless. The maps don't look that good, and there are too few icons. The DM tools simplifiy the DM's life a lot. NPC's, random encounter tables, and the like can be created in a matter of minutes. The books that it comes with are nice to have, but they will never replace the original hard-bound paper versions. Who wants to go to their computer to look up a rule in the middle of a game, when they can have their book right there on the table with them? Not me. If you are new to D&D, don't buy this as a replacement for the books. Buy the Paper version of the Players Handbook. If you are a DM and are looking for a time saver, like I was, this is the thing for you.
It could be better
4
Rating: 4,
Useful: 8 / 8
Date: June 03, 2002
Author: Amazon User
For those of you us who owned version 1.0 of the AD&D Core Rules CD-Rom, a revision is a long time in coming. Version 1.0 was a mess, with inconsistencies, broken programs, and a general feeling that TSR rushed it out as soon as possible without a whole lot of quality control (not an uncommon theme with TSR pre-WOTC takeover).
I'm happy to say they fixed a few problems. They also created a few more.
There are some staple elements that make you wonder why you ever bought any rule books. There's no less than nine of them, even more than version 1.0. Of course, that led me to wonder where the other ones were. Where's the Complete Book of ? The Wizard's Spellbooks? It doesn't matter. That's for Version 3.0.
Something seems to have happened to the Monster Manual, however. The pictures are no longer neatly displayed next to the descriptions. Instead, they're crammed into the RTF documents like the rest. Who wants to look at a monsterful of naked text?
What you will find is a hand-dandy number crunching program that allows you to make sense of all those Player's Option rules. I actually enjoyed this system, even if it was a bit awkward, because the Player's Option rules can make creating a character a much more complicated process.
Then there's the database. This database allows you to customize various objects, from magic items to monsters to encounters to kits. Which is neat. But only kits, and kits in the Players Option sense. Which means the kits are very weak. Also, there's a bit of confusion between giving a kit a bonus to a proficiency, a free proficiency, a preferred proficiency, and a required proficiency. Forget customizing classes -- THOU SHALT NOT TOUCH THE CORE RULES! Okay, so it's not THAT customizable.
I forgive all that. Having the cash equivalent of over $100 on a CD makes it worth the investment, especially if you're fond of hacking up the rules and want to insert your own house rules. To me, one of the biggest benefits of having AD&D rules in electronic text is what you can do with them.
What I can't forgive, however, is the mapping programs.
They tried. They tried very hard by including the Campaign Cartographer, which proved to be exceptionally dense and not particularly effective in mapping anything at all. I suspect it can be used by someone capable who wants to sit down and read the instruction manual, only there is none that accompany the CD. But that's not all! There's also another mapping program, the original mapping program that came with Version 1.0, Map Maker II.
That collective groan you're hearing in the background is from anyone who ever bought the first version. The reason they're groaning is because that sorry excuse for a mapping program didn't work. The good news is, it works now.
That's about it though. Worse, it's not exportable to any useful graphics format. No .pds, .bmps, .gifs. or jpgs. What good is this map? It works, but it's not even compatible with the Campaign Cartographer on the same CD!
Ultimately, the Advanced Dungeons and Dragons Core Rules CD-ROM 2.0 does what it's supposed to do: it's a solid reference that would make a valuable addition to any Dungeon Master's collection. But it could be better.
DM
4
Rating: 4,
Useful: 5 / 19
Date: January 04, 2000
Author: Amazon User
If you are a DM This product is just for you.(it makes mapmaking not so much of a hasstle!)
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