Crimson Longinus
Legend
What does that even mean?Official, but not binding.
What does that even mean?Official, but not binding.
It definitely seems that the reason people play them more than tabaxi and aasimar is that in the sole poll comparing play usages, you had to pay to play aasimar and tabaxi.*We can add to Halflings all day, make up new cultures and the like, but the core of what makes many of us enjoy playing them, the reason they survived the first couple iterations of the game to even become a legacy element of the game, the reason more people play them than play 90% of published races for 5e, is exactly the above.
…for the better.In 4e, a single fighter's power, Come and Get It was held up as everything wrong with 4e. How could you possibly have non-magical mind control? It made 4e the worst game ever written.
5e has the EXACT same thing, and everyone is falling over themselves to prove how it's non-magical. The times sure have changed.
There are quite a few adventures that focus on drow, so yes, there are a ton of adventures that focus on both elves and dwarves.So, without googling, how many adventures of any kind can you name off the top of your head? With 50 years of the hobby, there's a zillion adventures, modules, and campaigns, plus Dungeon magazine, not to mention all the 3rd party stuff.
And then, how many of those adventures focus on any of the other main PC races besides humans? Sure, there's a few (by my count, only dwarfs, or at least only dwarfs mentioned in the title, which means elves shouldn't be a PC race either using your metric), but are there as many as you think there should be?
Except that drow are underdark dwellers and usually the antagonists of the story.There are quite a few adventures that focus on drow, so yes, there are a ton of adventures that focus on both elves and dwarves.
I will point out that in Out of the Abyss, two prominent NPCs are deep gnomes and a section takes place in a deep gnome city. So in 5e published adventures, it seems that gnomes are more prominent than halflings.Again, you guys seem to pick single issues and never look at the whole. It's not that there's no NPC's. There are halfling NPC's, of course. It's not that there's no information about halflings. There is. Obviously there is. It's right there in the PHB after all. But, what there isn't is a whole lot of it. There are no halfling magic items. No halfling stories. No halfling lore in the settings. Or, ok, yes, there is some, obviously, but, not very bloody much of it and certainly a heck of a lot less than there is for every other of the 4 main races.
Tolkienism or Tokenism?I agree, the D&D Halfling is piggypacking off of the popularity of the Tolkien Hobbit.
The Halfling can still benefit from Tolkienism, even if it isnt one of the core-four lineages. If it is supposed to be Tolkien, then the lineage cannot be too well detailed for reallife legal reasons. But if the Halfling is nondescript and less developed, then that itself makes it more suitable for one of the background lineages.
Doesn’t matter. It is still elf lore and it is still prominent representation of elves in the world.Except that drow are underdark dwellers and usually the antagonists of the story.
In most mods the majority of drow are the enemy distinct from elves even if a minority can be allies.Doesn’t matter. It is still elf lore and it is still prominent representation of elves in the world.
Also, it’s not always the case that they are antagonists. Out of the Abyss has several prominent drow (and a section taking place in Menzoberrazen) where the drow can be allies.