D&D 5E WotC's Jeremy Crawford on D&D Races Going Forward

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On Twitter, Jeremy Crawford discussed the treatment of orcs, Vistani, drow and others in D&D, and how WotC plans to treat the idea of 'race' in D&D going forward. In recent products (Eberron and Wildemount), the mandatory evil alignment was dropped from orcs, as was the Intelligence penalty.


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@ThinkingDM Look at the treatment orcs received in Eberron and Exandria. Dropped the Intelligence debuff and the evil alignment, with a more acceptable narrative. It's a start, but there's a fair argument for gutting the entire race system.

The orcs of Eberron and Wildemount reflect where our hearts are and indicate where we’re heading.


@vorpaldicepress I hate to be "that guy", but what about Drow, Vistani, and the other troublesome races and cultures in Forgotten Realms (like the Gur, another Roma-inspired race)? Things don't change over night, but are these on the radar?

The drow, Vistani, and many other folk in the game are on our radar. The same spirit that motivated our portrayal of orcs in Eberron is animating our work on all these peoples.


@MileyMan1066 Good. These problems need to be addressed. The variant features UA could have a sequel that includes notes that could rectify some of the problems and help move 5e in a better direction.

Addressing these issues is vital to us. Eberron and Wildemount are the first of multiple books that will face these issues head on and will do so from multiple angles.


@mbriddell I'm happy to hear that you are taking a serious look at this. Do you feel that you can achieve this within the context of Forgotten Realms, given how establised that world's lore is, or would you need to establish a new setting to do this?

Thankfully, the core setting of D&D is the multiverse, with its multitude of worlds. We can tell so many different stories, with different perspectives, in each world. And when we return to a world like FR, stories can evolve. In short, even the older worlds can improve.


@SlyFlourish I could see gnolls being treated differently in other worlds, particularly when they’re a playable race. The idea that they’re spawned hyenas who fed on demon-touched rotten meat feels like they’re in a different class than drow, orcs, goblins and the like. Same with minotaurs.

Internally, we feel that the gnolls in the MM are mistyped. Given their story, they should be fiends, not humanoids. In contrast, the gnolls of Eberron are humanoids, a people with moral and cultural expansiveness.


@MikeyMan1066 I agree. Any creature with the Humanoid type should have the full capacity to be any alignmnet, i.e., they should have free will and souls. Gnolls... the way they are described, do not. Having them be minor demons would clear a lot of this up.

You just described our team's perspective exactly.


As a side-note, the term 'race' is starting to fall out of favor in tabletop RPGs (Pathfinder has "ancestry", and other games use terms like "heritage"); while he doesn't comment on that specifically, he doesn't use the word 'race' and instead refers to 'folks' and 'peoples'.
 

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Sorry that was not my intention, I read the LOTR trilogy as well as the whole Silmarillion some 40 years ago, and my first cinematic confrontation with that topic was the semi cartoon masterpiece by Ralph Bakshi. I took the scene of the modern blockbuster, because it is so well illustrating the serious, not rethoric question I had, because I forgot some of the lore. f you want to help me, can you clarify If the Tolkien lore states something about orcs and their roots which makes them different to e.g. standard D&D orcs?

Well, Melkor (a.k.a. Morgoth, Sauron's former boss...long since defeated) created the orcs originally. There seems to be some kind of innate "pull" that causes them to obey a leader like Melkor or Sauron, and in the absence of such a leader they become disorganized, and even disoriented, but they still manage to breed and harass men/elves/dwarves.

Honestly not sure how that differs, lore-wise, from standard D&D orcs. I know the stat-block, not the lore.

As far as the creation of half-orcs goes, there's nothing specific, just that it's an evil attributed to Saruman. That whole thing about emerging from the goo (that might have been a Uruk-hai, not a half-orc...I don't remember the movie well) has no antecedent in the texts.
 




In the books? Extermination by the men and elves.
In the movies? As far as can be discerned, they all fell into an extremely convenient pit.
Oh I think I'm thinking of the Hobbit. There was a mention after the Battle of the Five Armies, IIRC, where the orcs or goblins or whatever got to take up some farming after their leaders were killed in the battle or something.

Or maybe I'm thinking of one of the Redwall books.
 

2020 Orcs and Drow will no longer be evil, all the encounters with thesere races ancestries will be peaceful because we think that imaginary races ancestries are from european folklore are related to racist problems in the United States, we also do not believe that changing european folklore is cultural appropiation.

2022 Unintelligent monsters will not be killed anymore because they don't understand what's going on and they just try to defend their habitat, also killing unintelligent monsters like magical beasts has heavy similarities with hunting animals for sport. From now on they will be referred to as mythological creatures because the term monster is offensive and negative.

2024 The U word (for undead) is banned, now you will refer to them as ex-living and they will no longer will be associated to negative energy because it implies that there is something wrong with their existence

2026 D&D 6E comes out, it will no longer have a combat system because it may incite to real life violence, there will not be weapons anymore as well because we do not believe in them. All the encounters will be resolved with peaceful debates, while there will not be evil races ancestries or monsters mythological creatures combat is no longer required in this edition of Dungeons&Dragons.
Pretty much this.
'No fun allowed' is real.
 



Well, that's not what I said, but you do you, man.

You did not see it that way, but it is exactly what it can cause within people who get it wrong.

See, TV is mostly there to further dumb down the masses. Why does it work so well, especially with the most stupid shows like xy got talent or judge z with his live transmission of odd court cases or some sitcoms?
It is because people watching that garbage then can think: "wow look at this one, he is almost as stupid as me, or even look at that one he is even more stupid than me"

And that is how many people come to their judgement, it is like kindergarten: Why am I not allowed to do stupid naughty word (e.g. calling black people the n-word) and XY is entitled to do so (e.g. calling white people the g-word) because he is official classified as surpressed/ minority etc.

They do not come to the only good conclusion that neither of it is justified, it is just stereotype insults, and marks you as being a dumb racist.

But now come the self proclaimed protectors of the "weak" who might see all this quite clear but still jump to the defense, saying oh if a Turk in Germany calls a German "Kartoffel" (potato) then it is not a hate crime/racist because by definition he cannot be so, because he is a minority, or if he is not, then, as you proclaim, not member of the-ruler-of-the-world faction.
Or they construct nice sounding descriptions, talking around the intent and true meaning of a word just like: "oh but its true, many germans eat potatoes often and potatoes are a healthy vegetable yadda, yadda, yadda" - Do you see the analogy to your circling description around the word gringo?

In fact such racial slurs often mean "I am better because of you just because I got this nationality or that gene pool", in truth it very is often just the
"You are the guy in the stupid TV show that is even more stupid than me and this makes me feel better" - attitude

I do not get insulted by such, because I got the intellect to shrug it off but other German people might feel different, and see their stereotype judgment about Turks confirmed.
 

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