Something something, orcs are racist stereotypes of marginalized human cultures, something something, not interested in getting banned or having the thread shut down by discussing it, something something...
I don't take anything that doesn't exist seriously! I disagree that the narrative usefulness unquestionably exists, if it did, I wouldn't question it.
Well I keep repeating that you do what you want at your table, the fact that you assign a different meaning to what I say than what I say is, frankly, a you problem.
When did I ever mention changing something to a sub-race?
Something something, not a valid point, something something, the community is bigger than forums, and those problems would easily manifest with replacement human cultures. Just because the races can be written badly doesn't mean the idea itself is at fault, it's just being poorly used. Orcs are not offensive, the way they are portrayed by certain people using them is.
"I don't take anything that doesn't exist seriously!" Okay. Then
everything in this discussion is equally invalid for seriousness, and there's still no inherent merit or lack thereof for playing a fictional Human character over anything else. Now that we've taken 0 steps forward, we can continue.
You are wrong. "Does this has value" can only be answered by "yes, by those who give it value." "This
is meaningless" is a sentence that cannot ever be completely true. If something is capable of being given importance, it
can have value if such is desired, and so long as someone values it, it is not meaningless. You saying it is generally "meaningless" because it can change or "it's just fluff" is wrong, because neither of those things affect the idea of meaning. "This tool isn't useful because I don't know how to use it, nor do I want to" is such a terrible way of understanding
anything. "I don't know how to play a cello, so it must be meaningless wood I don't need to play music!" I say, next to an Orchestra demonstrating my bad reasoning. I believe things like "I don't
need X," within the context of this whole thread and your previous comments, shows this circular perspective of yours closing your mind to approaching this at-all differently. What is your argument, beyond "this is worthless because... I feel like it is?"
I am not assigning a different meaning to your statements. You say "remove the races," I hear an idea that actively contradicts any "acceptance" of other people's fun that you are trying to present. The blatant superior tone written with "
need," "can't take them seriously," "Silly hat," "worse at RP," "meaningless*," and whatever else is what undermines this tolerance you
say, but do not practice. Ideas like this should not go without dissent.
Removing the races fixes nothing. It doesn't fix offensive depictions so long as the actual culture and characterization of this culture's members stay the same*
. It doesn't fix RP or story because that is a symptom of a perspective-limited DM or Player, not the fault of the choice existing. It doesn't balance the game, because it's the rules given to races that are the problem, not the existence of non-human people**. Considering the noticeable lack of issue that can be actually pinned on this feature, compared to the positive reception that
interested DMs and Players can get out of this, that's why it should stay in the game. And, frankly, why it has value.
If you want an all-human RPG, play your restriction-Vision campaigns or a different RPG. DnD is what it is for everyone who plays it, it already has what it has, and you don't have spit in the eye of your own fellow players.
*(Compared to what? When you say that in response to the weird races, that implies that Human is somehow meaningful by comparison, which is not the case because it's equally fantastical and vulnerable to bad writing. But you also say it's
all meaningless... so if that's the case, then what is the harm of people playing as is? They get their fun, but it would impact nothing, so it can't do any harm, no?)
**(All of that offensive stuff is meaningless fluff, I thought... Do you think fluff matters or not?)
***(The weird races are mechanically weaker than the normal ones, anyway.)