FrogReaver
The most respectful and polite poster ever
Not being able to control what other people can say sure is a real bummer, amiright? #notalldictators
Thanks for another great example of the kinds of toxic posts we were talking about.
Not being able to control what other people can say sure is a real bummer, amiright? #notalldictators
To be fair though, magic weapons are worthwhile to practically anyone who fights, classed or no. While spellbooks are only going to show when a few types of classes show up with maybe a few extra from folks with feats appropriate to setting.Not sure what your point is.
Mine is that there is a great difference between magic weapons and spellbooks.
I have yet to see a single adventure where the author has "forgotten" to place magic weapons to loot, but in 5e it is not at all uncommon to find zero spellbooks.
Sent from my C6603 using EN World mobile app
Thanks for another great example of the kinds of toxic posts we were talking about.
Whoa. "Toxic." That's, like, really bad, yes? Are people going to die? ENW seems to be doing pretty well, and people have been topic drifting here for ages, so... did you mean "toxic" ironically? Like, you know, not actually toxic, but instead actually not-toxic? That doesn't make sense, though, because it really doesn't read like you're on my side of this. Although, as pointed out, written media can be confusing, so maybe I'm missing a really clever bit of ongoing sarcasm as social commentary? Kudos, if so.
Unfortunately, I think this is really just an example of the recent trend of borrowing the connotation of negative words to lazily dismiss the statements of others and try to bully them into silence. This may be acceptable when talking about truly vile contravention of social norms, like, say, open racism, but it becomes rather tedious and small when it's applied to the weighty topic of pretend elf discussion boards and the norms of posting therein. Really, you're trying to paint people not posting the way you wish them to as poisonous to the community, when this community has been posting that way, and thriving, for almost two decades. It's clearly not actually toxic.
In the meantime, I may occasionally have a bit of fun poking those that declare others aren't posting in accordance to their preferences and lamenting that they lack the power to force others to do so. Not because I think I'm morally correct in doing so, but because I generally find people who state they wish to have more power over other's ability to express themselves however they wish to be worthy of mockery using that ability to express myself how I choose. That's, just, like, my opinion, man.
I rather thought you were asking if it was fine as is when you asked if it was a thing.May I make a suggestion as well? Unless a thread is specifically asking for opinions on whether some X is "fine as is" then it's not nice to go into any thread and make comments like "X is fine as is".
May I make a suggestion as well? Unless a thread is specifically asking for opinions on whether some X is "fine as is" then it's not nice to go into any thread and make comments like "X is fine as is". It ends up being annoying, frustrating, derailing etc. Personally I think toxic is a good summarization of such behavior.
I rather thought you were asking if it was fine as is when you asked if it was a thing.
And indeed, I hesitated over answering "No" like I did because I thought you might misinterpret my joke as saying I thought it was not fine.
I know what you think you were doing. But what you were actually doing is trying to turn someone plea for others to show each other mutual respect by asking them to refrain from outright questioning the premise of every thread (at least within that thread)
Trying to twist that push for mutual respect into being labeled as some kind of dictatorship or thought police is toxic. Just like the other examples we have here
Topics of conversation drift around a bit, so you might want to consider lightening up on that. It's entirely natural when asking if spell sharing is "a thing" for people to mention being in favor of it as is, being opposed to it, or suggesting alternatives to it.