Justice and Rule
Legend
Sure, and I've moved well on from thinking the core of D&D offerings needs to appeal to me, and me alone.
The crux of the question is, if a book is released that offends someone, makes them feel unwelcome, does that mean they are being shown the door to the entire hobby, or does that mean that book is not something they care for?
Now personally, I absolutely feel that Wizards has no interest in my money. That doesnt mean I'm unwelcome. It doesnt mean they are excluding me.
It means my personal tastes, do not align with what they are providing in a general sense, and so I can look elsewhere to other games/books/companies.
If a 'controversial' book, singular, was released, that is not excluding people from the entire hobby. It is a matter of taste. Its a matter of personal choice, as I certainly do not assume that any demographic views near any issue as a monolith.
If it were one book, maybe? But we already had someone in here tell me that adherence to canon was so imperative that we couldn't lose slavery out of the Forgotten Realms, despite the fact that it is really only present in lore blurbs.
Of course. I wasn't saying you can't have epic expansion without slavery, I was saying epic imperial expansion is an evil that presumably people would also want to exclude.
I mean, are people actually asking not to include that or are we just making stuff up to be angry at? Again, people have specific asks here, we should probably concentrate on those instead of just making slippery slope assumptions.
In terms of gladiators, yes you absolutely can do what you are saying. Like I said, settings are thought experiments at their best so I am always in favor of more being on the table (if someone wants to make a world where the kind of gladiators you describe exist, I am all for that). But I am also for not taking Roman style gladiators and slavery off the table as a creative choice by publishers and designers.
But "Roman-style gladiators" aren't all about slavery, either. Are you actually going to deal with someone being owned by someone else, or are you just there for big coliseum battles? Again, you talk about things being taken off the table, but are they actually being used or are they just a style point?
I wasn't suggesting slavery was the only society wide ill (genocide is another that leaps to mind, but many forms of oppression can exist at the society level, mass impoverishment, moral panics, etc). I don't think we are in disagreement here. I was responding to Umbra's suggestion of focusing on evil at the individual level, not focusing on slavery as the sole societal evil.
Sure, sure. Maybe it would be better to say that as a "society-wide ill", slavery is grievously overused, and often only for gratuitous reasons.