AnotherGuy
Hero
That C&C Castle Keeper's Guide's cover is awesome.
I'm not sure what spell the victim in the fiend's hand is casting though.
I'm not sure what spell the victim in the fiend's hand is casting though.
But look at what's been happening all over the thread, too: people minimizing other peoples' complaints and experiences instead of acknowledging that other people may experience things differently than them.
The point is that it is not our call to make.
We're not here to explain away what other people ought or ought not be offended by, at least it doesn't help anyone. What does help? Actually listening to a wide range of people, their perceptions and opinions. Getting knowledgeable about other peoples' experiences.
My guess would be one of the Summon Monster spells, though that raises the question of what type of spectral bird it is.That C&C Castle Keeper's Guide's cover is awesome.
I'm not sure what spell the victim in the fiend's hand is casting though.
Agreed.And, maybe that's a fair critique. But I don't think it really fits into the "controversial content" bucket this thread seems to be focused on.
The halfling is on p. 26.Page 25? The weirdly draw halfling, yes having a huge head like Mr. Mackey off South Park is an unrealistic body image.
(...)
Because Wizards has been on a track to 'disney-fication' D&D over the last several years...
If we replace the somewhat derogatory-sounding "Disney-fication" with "recognition that some of the presentation was off-putting to parts of the market we want in the game," we get a better picture of what's going on.
We can disagree with others, be they present or not, without saying or implying that their complaint is baseless. We can also reflect, realize and admit we don't really know much about a certain topic, subtopic or other peoples' experiences, which is neither practiced often nor seen as the virtue it is, though. These are complex issues. Variants of "all opinions matter" tend to just murky them down. By which I don't mean that any of our opinions don't mean anything, just that they are often not as informed as we think them to be.
In the end, none of this matters much anyway, because we are just a couple of random folks shooting the breeze about matters much bigger than us on a message board in some corner of the internet![]()
If we replace the somewhat derogatory-sounding "Disney-fication" with "recognition that some of the presentation was off-putting to parts of the market we want in the game," we get a better picture of what's going on.