When comparing Basic Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition vs Open d6, the Slant community recommends Open d6 for most people. In the question“What are the best tabletop RPGs?” Open d6 is ranked 22nd while Basic Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition is ranked 47th. The most important reason people chose Open d6 is:
Open d6 includes rulebooks for Fantasy, Adventure and Space settings.
Ranked in these QuestionsQuestion Ranking
Pros
Pro Bounded Accuracy
Bounded Accuracy is a core design ideal of 5th Edition. In short, it means the numbers don't get too big; this lets weak challenges remain relevant for longer, and strong ones become survivable sooner. In practice, it also places more focus on a character's inherent abilities and less on magical equipment than has been the case in recent editions.
Pro Easiest tabletop RPG to find someone to play with
As D&D is the largest tabletop RPG franchise and played by most people, it is the easiest tabletop RPG to find players for.
Pro Encourages character immersion
Numerous core aspects of 5th Edition exist solely to encourage thinking in-character, including mechanical rewards for good roleplay and detailed character backgrounds with lasting effects in the game.
Pro Minimal but versatile rules
5th Edition strikes an impressive balance in keeping the rules simple without limiting the creativity of players.
Pro Includes rulebooks covering the more common genres
Open d6 includes rulebooks for Fantasy, Adventure and Space settings.
Pro No special dice required
The game can be played with common six-sided dice.
Pro A simplified variant, called Mini Six, is available
Mini Six is a fan-made variant of Open d6 that aims to be a distilled version of the Open d6 system.
Pro There are theme-related books available to start various types of games
D6 Space is West End Games old "Star Wars D6" game with all of the licensed Star Wars names removed. It's a stand alone complete game.
D6 Fantasy is a standalone ruleset for running a D&D type game with the D6 system.
D6 Adventure is a standalone ruleset for using the D6 system in a Wild West, spies, or modern adventure game.
All three have supplement books (Spaceship design, magic, aliens, etc).
Pro Each rulebook has a good introductory section
Cons
Con Lacks variety in various areas
In order to make the character creation fast and relatively simple in-depth customization options have been excluded from the basic ruleset. There's also a limited selection of character options (just 4 classes with a single sub-class), monsters, magic items, etc. The variety is to be found in the full game.
Con Still puts too much emphasis on spellcasters
The sword and sandal brigade, as well as the ever undervalued and undersupported Ranger class (Arcane Archer is under Fighter, not Ranger, where it belongs!), are still second fiddle to the magic slingers and rogues who are always overpowered.
Con Too easy to fall into the meatgrinder trap
Roleplaying falls by the wayside too easily as the murder-hobo set are catered to! Of course, it's also about the DM, however, majority of players want combat and that is exactly what D&D likes to provide - along with the archetypal and archetypical meat-grinder dungeon fest.