Both of which are 4-5 times lighter than the centaur, have slight builds, and specialized hooves. You're comparing apples and oranges.
Big horn sheep averages 315 lbs.
Ravnica Centaur averages about 660. So, they are barely twice as heavy, and no where near four or five times as heavy. They are also likely both medium, so in DnD terms they have similar builds. And we've already been discussing hooves.
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Which is part of what I was saying.
Yet, somehow, the other position seems to be that virtually anything should be allowed and that having a limit somehow means the DM (or worldbuilder) is somehow in the wrong.
I would agree that most DMs should make some effort to accommodate something, but I also believe that there are justifiable reasons for saying something does not fit.
If you think that is the opposing position, then you haven't been listening to the multiple times we have said that that is not our position.
Further (as a few others have mentioned,) where those lines are for a person may change depending upon setting, genre, or other factors. But the lines still (typically exist).
Lines exist, but not everything you think is past the line for the genre is something the player thinks is past the line for the genre.
Shifters exist in Tolkien. Beorn is a blatant example. So bringing a shifter to a Tolkien game is not crossing the line. Yet, some DMs claim that it is, and that trying to play one is disrespectful to the DM, and the player just wanting to be a special snowflake and break the rules they laid out.
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Seems like a no brainer, that you as a DM, could say no changelings because it is lazy storytelling. Even if the character had a cool concept. But, you would be wrong according to some. They would pin that into "I just don't like it." I would pin it in, "story purposes." It seems legi to me. But, I doubt that is how some will see it.
At what point are you calling the player's concept for the Changeling lazy storytelling?
I mean, haven't you said there should be no judgements from either side, but a player going to
@Johnny3D3D 's table with a Changeling character, wanting to explore the tension between a character with multiple identities seems like they are going to get told "No, that is lazy storytelling and I won't allow it." or "I know you are just trying to disrupt the game at the worst possible times, no I won't allow it."
Both of those seem like judging the player and their character solely for being interested in the Changeling story.
And what if the DM says "That would cause a lot of changes to the security apparatus's of the various nations, and I don't want to deal with that much work." and the player's response is "Actually, I've been thinking about anti-changeling security, here are the ideas I've had". If they are doing a lot of the work... should they still be told no because it is too much work for the DM?
This is why I keep pressing. Because while you claim that your side is the only side saying "no judgements" or "think about the extra work for the DM" you seem to constantly be judging (centaurs are silly, Changelings are lazy, this player is just trying to break the rules to feel special) and not open to the possibility that the player might be willing to do quite a bit of the work.
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Yes. And I have. The centaur on page 10 has no cloven hoof. It's like.........................a horse! The one on page 88 is even more clearly a horse hoof. You ready to concede the point yet?
page 10 has a loxodon, a simic hybrid and human. No centaur.
The one on 88 doesn't show enough of the hoof to tell if it is split or not. It looks like it might be a normal hoof, but a normal hoof wouldn't allow the climb speed that the Centaur is explicitly given, and it could be something else.
It says horse.
"Centaurs have the upper bodies, down to the waist, of muscular humans, displaying all the human variety of skin tones and features. Their ears are slightly pointed, but their faces are wider and squarer than those of elves. Below the waist, they have the bodies of small horses"
So? An Eohippus is still a horse. And the Centaur could have zebra style colorations, something we see quite often in depictions of ancient horses. Who, by the way, tended to be smaller.
So, this doesn't prove anything.
Yes it is interesting. It works out something like this.
Ravnica book: Centaurs are fey and have horse bodies and horse hooves.
You: It says Fey! That means that they are not like horses and have cloven hooves.
Or, how about what I'm actually saying.
Since they are fey, maybe their bodies are closer to
ancient horses which had different hoof structures.
That way, instead of you just saying "these rules are stupid, I am going to ignore them, because modern horse hooves don't work that way" you can say "okay, the rules work if I assume X"