CleverNickName
Limit Break Dancing (He/They)
I know right?Hot yikes on that description.
Like I said, it left a long-lasting impression. I still don't use gnomes to this day, on either side of the screen.
I know right?Hot yikes on that description.
The Asari from Mass Effect were just blue-skinned bisexual human women with a different body shape. Same with all the other "races" in Mass Effect-- humans in different rubber masks. You could swap out any of those racial avatars for human ones but keep the personalities, actions, and communication styles exactly the same and there would be very few times when it would seem weird.try looking into mass effect asari for how elves might take to adventuring.
WW's bread and butter was the World of Darkness, a setting popuated by a shadow world of monsters where the mechanics usually had an inner monster/conflict deal that took over if you did certain things.look I am not old enough for me to fully get this joke, I know they made those vampire games which had media spin-offs a game and a VHS show both of which I believe my mother bought.
so can you explain how they are diet xenofiction?
building the tallest tower begins with the placement of a single stone, no one made elves both playable and alien in one move it was a suggestion of starting point for one area of the elf experience.The Asari from Mass Effect were just blue-skinned bisexual human women with a different body shape. Same with all the other "races" in Mass Effect-- humans in different rubber masks. You could swap out any of those racial avatars for human ones but keep the personalities, actions, and communication styles exactly the same and there would be very few times when it would seem weird.
honestly, I hate darksun halflings they are just an insult to both ambitus mages and people eating forest dwellers both of which I consider far better than halflings, have I ever explained how much I just hate halflings?In the volume 2 supplement we currently have in edits, there’s an alliance of gnomes that lashed out militarily against all the other races in the region. The premise of the encounter/adventure being that someone has come forward to atone for why it all went down. So there are definitely different ways to portray gnomes.
It’s one of the reasons I loved Dark Sun. Think halflings are lovable Tolkien-happy-go-lucky…how about they were ambitious mages who broke the world!!
but that is about resiting becoming the other not being the other which is what I crave to play as, it is more personal horror than xenofiction let alone diet xenofiction.WW's bread and butter was the World of Darkness, a setting popuated by a shadow world of monsters where the mechanics usually had an inner monster/conflict deal that took over if you did certain things.
The Asari from Mass Effect were just blue-skinned bisexual human women with a different body shape.
That's part of the challenge with trying different identities - try too many and you dilute the impression you're making. Depending on the edition/setting you started with, what you know about gnomes may differ from what the player next to you at the table knows.Gnomes don't occupy any space. They don't have a purpose or a niche or a worthwhile role. It isn't that they "aren't Tolkien" (I mean, really?) it's that they aren't anything. They have spent multiple editions trying to give gnomes an identity, from tricksters to tinkers, and none of it has taken.
Every single race in D&D is just a "stereotyped human".
I tend to prefer forest gnomes over rock gnomes, simply because I feel rock gnomes are a bit too tightly wound to the artificer class and that is not something I particularly love in my fantasy.Tinkerer, Illusionists and pranksters are what I leap to mentally when I first think of a gnome. They do vary a good deal from setting to setting of course. Part of the issue may be that they have varied too much from edition to edition (and other races have more of a through line: honestly though I would need to read all the entries from each edition back to back to really see if that is the case or not). If someone could past in iterations from the core books in different editions I think that would go a long way towards making this conversion more concrete (as it seems there is a vagueness in the discussion now)