doctorbadwolf
Heretic of The Seventh Circle
I think you may be right about more humans appearing, but I think your reason for that is off.It's because of the game mechanics.
I firmly believe we'd have more Humans in D&D if race gave no mechanical benefit whatsoever and it was purely a flavor thing a player would append to their character story upon creation.
We see all the time people here talk about not wanting or bothering with "character backgrounds" or "character histories" and instead want their story to come out of gameplay at the table. If a character's race became just one more thing you'd create in your character's "background" or "history" and had no impact at the table... I believe a large number of players would stop bothering to choose.
Some players of course would continue to select a race for their character-- those that actually created a background and past history of their PC prior to adventuring-- but that number would be less than it is now because of all the players who select non-human races because of the mechanical benefit.
Yes, I'm jaded.![]()
DnD is a game that is built, in it's current incarnation, in such a way that mechanical representation is the fictional reality for many players. If there is no mechanical impact to being a dragonborn, they aren't playing a dragonborn. The game "allowing" them to say they're doing so would just be meaningless. Sure, I can also say my character is super strong, but if the strength score don't back me up....my character isn't super strong.