Bedrockgames
I post in the voice of Christopher Walken
You sir, know how to build anticipation and suspenseoops. posted too soon. am editing.

You sir, know how to build anticipation and suspenseoops. posted too soon. am editing.
I was hoping that one of the things that the work of Peterson, et al., would do would be to curtail the essentialist narratives.
Early D&D was just as (if not) more diverse in terms of approaches and playstyles than we have today, depending on when and where you were. It was not just about "beating a dungeon, and was more viewed as a toolkit to enable play in the 70s. It is simply error to try and incorporate our views from today back then; even people who grew up playing in the 80s have a very poor view of what the game was like in the 70s.
In other words, most of this just isn't true. The Elusive Shift explores this in more depth, and there have been numerous threads on the subject.
I know how to accidentally hit enter.You sir, know how to build anticipation and suspense![]()
Yeah, all good generalizations fail, which may actually be a featureWhile you're not wrong, even early on this started varying locally based on game culture spread. But the game sure gave you no help.
I think always-evil villain species are possible. It works for non-humanoids (manticores, giant scorpions, stirges, etc.). They don't even have to be 'evil incarnate' things like demons or devils. What does have to happen, however, is that you keep this unflinchingly consistent across the IP (and, for D&D, the inspired works, since clearly WoW and Warhammer and various D&D inspired webcomics, manga, and computer games influence how people see orcs). The ship has sailed for orcs, but WotC with 5e tried to make gnolls the resident 'it's always okay to fight these guys' monster, and it has sorta worked (minus a few people who had favorite gnoll PCs or the like. Honestly it would have been better to introduce a completely new monster for this role).
I would say that 'birthright' and associated 'virtue through birth and heritage' is the core pillar of the intellectual edifice of classism. The ruling elite is ordained to be who it is and to rule by virtue of birth and nothing else, essentially. Obviously we've somewhat discarded that way of thinking, in some cultures, though it always seems to lurk beneath the surface. It is a very easy and convenient story to support whomever happens to be in charge today, even if they weren't born to it, surely their progeny are.I don't think it's about class as such, but rather anti-modernist sensibilities as such.
Yeah, Tolkien is really very mainstream Christian in his overall philosophy, though obviously the cosmology of ME uses a bit different mythological framework to facilitate exploration of myths rooted in pre-Christian belief systems.It's very much about conformity to the will of the divine; and the closely-related workings of providence. So no one's heritage or social situation is a meaningless accident.
I personally don't get any nihilistic vibe; that's something I associate with REH's Conan, which is utterly modernist despite the trappings. (The closest to an exception is The Hour of the Dragon.)
I could agree with the mixed bag message in cartoons. But not movies and tv. From the 70's on, it seemed that they were anything but villains. But the point is that is the exact opposite of how orcs were in the primary texts.It's a pretty mixed bag. The Looney Toons reruns included the ones with 'Indian attacking the settlers or wagon train' adventure points well into the 90s. Stagecoach definitely exemplified an era where Native Americans were the villains counter to cowboys. There was probably move towards sympathetic instead of unsympathetic with the rise to prominence of revisionist westerns in the 60s and 70s with things like Chief Dan George's turn in Little Big Man and The Outlaw Josey Wales and similar.
It's a pretty mixed bag. The Looney Toons reruns included the ones with 'Indian attacking the settlers or wagon train' adventure points well into the 90s. Stagecoach definitely exemplified an era where Native Americans were the villains counter to cowboys. There was probably move towards sympathetic instead of unsympathetic with the rise to prominence of revisionist westerns in the 60s and 70s with things like Chief Dan George's turn in Little Big Man and The Outlaw Josey Wales and similar.
It's a pretty mixed bag. The Looney Toons reruns included the ones with 'Indian attacking the settlers or wagon train' adventure points well into the 90s. Stagecoach definitely exemplified an era where Native Americans were the villains counter to cowboys. There was probably move towards sympathetic instead of unsympathetic with the rise to prominence of revisionist westerns in the 60s and 70s with things like Chief Dan George's turn in Little Big Man and The Outlaw Josey Wales and similar.
Yeah, all good generalizations fail, which may actually be a feature.
Deeper characterization was uncommon. There was plenty of 'cartoon' level stuff. As evidence pretty much every group experienced 'Grog', the really dumb half-orc 'barbarian' fighter. I mean, you can poll the thread, my brother ran it in our group. ...