No-one said you couldn't have those opinions. I really wish you'd stop dramatizing this and making yourself the victim at every turn. You've done it in a huge percentage of your responses here.
However, everyone has opinions, and ignorant opinions aren't worth much.
Right, I should stop dramatizing, everyone has opinions.
Mine just aren't worth much....
If you've never seen Buffy and are going on opinions from completely different sources, particularly culturally distant ones (anime) or pre-Buffy ones, you're likely to greatly misunderstand the tone, dynamic, and so on. Equally, if you're looking at a bunch of post-Buffy sources which largely sought to emulate Buffy (of which there have been many, including the recent Warrior Nun), you might be absolutely fine, and even understand stuff someone who had only seen Buffy didn't, because the derivative works had made it more obvious.
Sure, but this is filled with assumptions on your part. Buffy isn't the only one who can do the monster killing in Buffy, for example. This is one of the points the RPG makes - there are basically two types of character as a result.
But you're not really contradicting my point here. If you comment on a Buffy RPG without understanding the source material, then you opinion may or may not be informed or valuable, depending on a lot of factors. Whereas if you understood the source material, or at least directly derivative works, it would be vastly more likely to be valuable, and you'd be better placed to assess the value of your own input.
I've seen this before with RPGs - someone critiques some particular mechanic heavily, not understanding the purpose of the mechanic, because they don't understand the tone/source material. Sometimes this is a failing of the RPG itself. Sometimes, though, people come in really hard saying some mechanic sucks, when they just don't get the context it exists in. And because this is the internet, instead of saying "Oh, I guess that makes sense in context", they often just double-down. Sigh.
I mean, and unlike you here, I'm willing to admit I've been the guy in the wrong, especially when I was younger. I had strong opinions about stuff I profoundly didn't get. When I learned more about it, I felt like an idiot. But people attempting to explain it to me at the time had little impact - whereas understanding the context did.
Unlike me?
Right. I'm not willing to admit that my opinion on a DnD setting has little value, because I haven't read specific works. How dare I
And, you completely side-stepped my entire point.
Source material is great to know, and sometimes mechanics are important for thematic elements. But, even without ever having seen Buffy I know it is about a high school chosen one saving the world from monsters. And I know a lot of stories that do that. And if there is a single mechanic I don't understand for thematic reasons, I would be sure someone would tell me about the thematic connection if it was obvious enough.
But I can't even get to that point. I can't even get to the point of talking about specific mechanics, because I should not even open the thread to read the first post, because (as I have been told) my ignorance means that I can only give opinions that are "not worth much"
See, this is kind of what I'm talking about though - you're assuming that, and it's full-blast assumption.
If Howard and Moorcock are anywhere near as influential as people claim, then the fact that I have read a wide swath of fiction written since the 2000's means the odds of me reading something inspired by them are high.
There are only so many tropes and set-ups in fiction, and a lot of them overlap.
What's with the victim complex here? Did I say it was a problem? It's not, and I am kind of surprised you're claiming you're an English major but this is throwing you. It does mean, however, that you're going to read the setting very differently. There may be stuff that just doesn't make any sense to you without context.
.... Yes, and?
Remember this entire discussion started because I asked to understand, I was told that without the proper context I could never understand. In fact, you yourself in this same post stated "everyone has opinions, and ignorant opinions aren't worth much."
And at the same time as telling me my opinion isn't worth much at all... you also want to stated that I might read the setting differently and that isn't a problem.
Well, if it isn't a problem, then why slam the door in my face before I can even begin discussing the setting? I never once thought I would have a perfect understanding of the setting, but I couldn't even get people to give me the basics for a full day and a half, because "you just wouldn't understand, so I won't even start trying to explain it better."
Dear
@Chaosmancer , it is not the fact that you asked, but that you refused to read the stuff that was suggested. Sometimes, to have a better understanding, you have no choice but to read and familiarize yourself with the subject. You clearly rejected that idea and brought lightning onto you.
Edit: Not from me though. I don't expect people to read as fast as I am. But the perceived tone with which you answered was... haughty?
I guess I'm sorry for being haughty, but I still stand by the fact that I'm not going to drop everything in my life to stop and read material to understand a setting that people want to be sold.
I asked "What is the hook for Greyhawk, what makes it so people should buy it from their game store" and when I revealed I had no knowledge of sword and sorcerery, well, the answer basically has boiled down to "If you aren't familiar, you need to learn, because no one is trying to sell it to you."
Sure, sometimes you need to familiarize yourself with the material, but sometimes you can't do that immediately, and I pushed back on this idea that there is nothing about Greyhawk I can understand or appreciate without having first read S&S.
And, if people want the setting to be sold to new players of DnD... that is kind of important, because as I mentioned a while back, someone who wanders into their FLGS, sees Greyhawk, and asks about it, or heck reads a blurb meant to hook them in, isn't going to be hooked by "The Setting that you have to have read the Sword and Sorcerery Genre to understand.". They are going see that, think that, no, they haven't read any of that, and ignore the product.