JRRNeiklot
First Post
You'd get laughed at less if you painted yourself pink and ran across the football field during the superbowl. Naked. In Minnesota.
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Of the two dozen players I have played with in my group(s) since 1997, six of them wanted to either be part-dragon, have dragon abilities, or be a large scalely Lizard-esque race. There has always been a demand for a race like the Dragonborn since I have played D&D. So in my opinion, by making the Dragonborn the baseline for players, the dislike you have now for Dragonborn would be as ludicrious as saying that half-orcs are lame now if you sent 4E back to the 70s
Lizardmen, I don't mind at all. And half-orcs make sense to me, and let you play an outcast race (without being a Drizzt clone), which can be appealing sometimes.
But part-dragon makes no sense to me, fluff-wise, and annoys me as being way too gee whiz for a serious game. Totally destroys my suspension of disbelief to imagine people and dragons can have kids together, or that two-legged mini-dragons are running around.
So you just dont pay any attention to the fact that Tolkien Orcs as a race of likely non-reproducing beings... now reproduces with humans?(Legalos and Glimli never had to worry about the moral quandries of killing Orc babies as there weren't any to kill) and there is no real world legends... inspite of Tolkein borrowing a generic name-word meaning monster for his Orcs.
Evil sorcerors and witch kings make orcs as cannon fodder... the things dont reproduce.
There's also some debate as to whether orcs were "corrupted" versions of elves, or something else -- IIRC, Tolkien was never entirely clear on the matter, but did say that Morgoth/Sauron can't create life, which implies corruption rather than creation, and PERHAPS breeding to replace their ranks thereafter . . . either that, or the supply of orcs would have been dwindling over the ages.
Your gut response seems at most to be unreasoned nostalgia... I see no more evidence from the prevalence in real legend of peoples mixing with shape shifting dragon and humans... that time travelled back anyone not influenced by a previous game version would find half orcs more plausible or less for that matter.
My life in the 70's may have been conservative (I was a teen in late 70s') to most appearances but there was a strong sense that there were things both positive and negative in the counterculture of the 60's and that it could be learned from there was a sense that bigotry was very bad, women were powerful and some very light hearted star trek like attitudes that the world can be made to be a better place... (the original star trek ... wasn't that popular when it came out it blossomed later).I The very first reaction you'd get from most people would probably be, "Is that some sort of book about Occultism?" If you're lucky, this might entice some people to play, but 1970 outside of the counterculture is still a pretty conservative era.
IIRC, orcs from vats were an invention of the movie, not the book.