EzekielRaiden
Follower of the Way
Because if blank canvases count, then there shouldn't be any races at all. Every archetype you could possibly conceive of--every archetype you can't conceive of, every archetype logical or illogical, already exists. Hence, no races should exist except human. Since (I presume!) you agree that having some races that aren't human is valuable, blank canvases do not count as covering an archetype.I don't understand why "blank canvases do not count" when they "certainly can do anything," or why archetypes need to be rigid instead of flexible, or what any of this has to do with Tolkien. You're giving this topic a lot more thought and consideration than I am.
Hence my example with the pre-painted canvas in gold or black (or blue, if you wish to paint the blue hour), and B:TAS with its black paper. That you can add black color on top of white paper is not the same as having black paper to begin with.
And I amended that with both (a) my statement that dwarves just don't fill the niche as I understand it--no one (as far as I'm aware, anyway) would conflate dwarves with Klingons, for example, who are the ultra-archetypal "proud warrior race"!--and (b) that the fact that they are short is a serious knock against them for most folks, including me. It's not a knock that totally drives everyone away; I know multiple people personally who love dwarves and prefer to play them when possible. But it is something to consider.But earlier you wrote,
and I still disagree with that statement.
If they are held to the same high standard, what is the difference? I genuinely don't understand. The book is optional either way; you pick up what you want and ignore what you want. Why is it suddenly offensive to call Dragon Magazine content or splatbook content "core"? All it means is what you've just said--it's held to exactly the same quality standards as everything else.These things are not the same. Splatbooks and optionals should of course be held to that same high standard; but they shouldn't be marketed as "core".
And, do note, this is a player phrase. I don't think WotC ever used it themselves. I could be wrong, but I've certainly never seen anyone quote anything from WotC saying it. It's just a descriptor used for telling people "ALL content is held to the same standard as the PHB/DMG/MM." And they almost always succeeded at that! There's variation within and between books, but compared to 3e, 4e absolutely knocked it out of the park for offering high-quality content, with no need to ban or rewrite anything, in almost every book. Even Dragon Magazine content was almost always really solid. Some of my favorite stuff is from there, actually, like the expanded mount options for Paladins (you can get a friggin' silver dragon mount in Epic tier, how awesome is that?!)