WheresMyD20
First Post
Was from the 70s, and we've grown as a culture since then.
You're basing your response on two words quoted out of context?
Was from the 70s, and we've grown as a culture since then.
I think you need to read what I wrote more carefully. You're misrepresenting what I said. I NEVER said to deliberately exclude anyone. Your response is a classic straw man argument.
Here's the big question. Would you pay an extra $1 per book to get more art? Figure they sell 5000 copies of everything, at least. That gets them a couple thousand extra bucks for illustrations.
Would you be okay with spending $3 to $40 extra over the course of an edition, per person, to have more art?
Also, would you be willing to spend that much extra on EN Publishing products too? Because I'd love to hire more artists.![]()
You are arguing against purposely being inclusive -- that is an argument in favor of being purposely exclusionary, sorry.
In the defense of Eberron:Yup.... But.... That isn't quite the same thing.
I want to avoid the "creature cantina" vibe that 4e had, where it seemed the elven/dwarven/whatever lands had been replaced with these weird, but harmonious, menageries. Eberron is also a bit guilty of this, despite being a great setting. I did not care for the "whatever color you want" approach in that setting. I much, much prefer Greyhawk's racial origins model.
In fact, I'd say that whatever the Greyhawk "vibe" is, I want to keep that. Races (both in the elf vs. dwarf and the brown vs. white sense) exist and there are elements that go along with that. Every Greyhawk ethnicity had a proud heritage to claim and attractive reasons to choose to play a character of that stock. In fact, when I played a Baklunish rogue in RtToEE, the background I brought with me helped to engage the group with the setting more than any NPC could have done. In Eberron, it doesn't matter so everyone plays whatever color they are.
Dang. I hadn't realized just how perfect Greyhawk was, in this regard, until you pointed it out. Whatever it had, keep it.
As far as art goes, I have absolutely no problem seeing more variety in the characters portrayed. We have a lot more action movies that have women leads than we did in the '80s. I don't think most guys are going to feel threatened by a few reasonable pictures of women with swords. As far as political correctness goes, just make sure the art doesn't go so far that I don't have any images to inspire my burly/sneaky/smart dude characters.
Also, this Kormarck guy would make an awesome anchor artist for 5e. I really like the style. People in life, not striking poses. Some actual backgrounds, too.
That's a different story. Making a white character is not racist. Ordering someone to make his black character white is.I just remembered the story about Monte Cook demanding that the 3rd edition iconic character of Regdar the human fighter to be nonwhite and throwing a fit when the marketing department made him white.