Crimson Longinus
Legend
I think that's what I like about them...dragons have this weird issue where D&D can't decide whether they're animals or supergeniuses so they're both instead.

I think that's what I like about them...dragons have this weird issue where D&D can't decide whether they're animals or supergeniuses so they're both instead.
Sorry!First of, I have to say I am really glad someone started this thread. The two current threads in which the exact same topic is already being discussed clearly weren't enough!![]()
As much Gygaxian vernacular fantasy can add difficulties to bringing players new to it into a Classic game, bizarre and extremely unique settings can also present difficulties. Cliche and known aspects of the setting are important to fantasy as they allow the author or designer to highlight the fantastical elements and the reader or player to appreciate them. In adventure design especially, where page space and referee attention are both at a premium the use of cliches and well known elements can quickly suggest a description that the referee or players will fill in easily, while something entirely strange and unique requires a level of detail and explanation that goes beyond what most players of an RPG are willing or able to take in prior to playing. More visual mediums such as film or video games are more easily able to convey setting information through imagery that breaks with audience expectations, while less interactive mediums such as novels don’t ask the reader to make decisions based on the unknown setting and can more slowly unveil it.
I think of dragons as being like cats, so both animals and super-geniusesI think that's what I like about them...![]()
I can see a Faction Folio as a viable product to market. It's not something we've really seen before in non-setting-specific books, but give them a really generic name and a page with customization options, and you could have a really useful book for GMs.Yes. It won't be better if we get a replacement of "evil race" by "evil cultures".
Some of us just need mindless caricatures to serve as the BBEG's foot soldiers.
And anyway, OSE already exists. It's not D&D in name, but it's otherwise exactly what you're asking for. A gorgeously reorganized B/X with new art and ascending AC as an option. It even has super convenient online reference tools.I think the chance that WotC forks their product line to appeal to the small percentage of the base that prefers the older aesthetics when they already have all of those older editions available via PDF is approximately zero.
You are probably right.
And even Tolkien struggled with this.orcs, goblins, and the like are inspired by folklore that essentially viewed such things as evil spirits that inhabited the wilds. Tolkiens middle earth was also influenced by his Anglican worldview that included moral absolutes as good and evil and that free thinking entities can be wholly devoted to one or the other. IE- angels are good and fallen angels or demons are wholly evil, elves are wholly good and orcs were corrupted elves, originally. D&D took these creatures largely from Tolkiens vision and kept this concept of moral dedication. Thus, here you have the origins of the "evil" monstrous humanoids, completely divorced from postmodern political views.
Tolkien:
""They would be Morgoth’s greatest Sins, abuses of his highest privilege, and would be creatures begotten of Sin, and naturally bad (I nearly wrote ’irredeemably bad’; but that would be going too far. Because by accepting or tolerating their making - necessary to their actual existence - even Orcs would become part of the World, which is God’s and ultimately good.)~Letter #153"
Don't blame @Malmuria! The article posted starts off by saying:First of, I have to say I am really glad someone started this thread. The two current threads in which the exact same topic is already being discussed clearly weren't enough!![]()
And what makes them cool? That they're the enemy - maybe honourable, maybe not - to be fought and vanquished.Why do people keep asking this? Obviously, they exist as part of the game because people want them to. They’re cool.