Levistus's_Leviathan
5e Freelancer
Do I think it's hyperbolic to say that "D&D having official lore be that the most prominent dark skinned race in the game has black skin because they were cursed by a good god for being evil is racist"? No, absolutely not. I think it's hyperbolic to read my post and come to the conclusion that I think any kind of skin-color changing curse is racist. If a pixie got offended by a party member and temporarily turned their skin purple, that would not be racist. Scanlan turning Vex'ahlia's skin green while she rode the Broom of Flying in Critical Role wasn't racist, it was an obvious reference to the Wizard of Oz. But having a good god curse a group of people with dark skin because they're evil, that obviously is eerily similar to real world justifications for the enslavement and discrimination of African Americans.The Curse of Ham is racist because it was developed into an ideology to justify racist oppression and is clearly and patently not the actual cause of differences in skin pigmentation.
Do you not think you’re being a bit hyperbolic here? I think we should be more cautious when ascribing racism to something simply for sharing similarities else to something when it doesn’t share the actual racist elements that causes that thing to be racist.
Some fairly fringe depictions of the biblical story of the curse of ham are racist - ergo all fictional curses that change someone’s skin colour are racist. That seems a stretch to me.
There is of course a solution if you feel that is the case… the curse of The drow is racist propaganda told by sun elves to justify the banishment of the drow after the fact, and the pigmentation elements are a magical response to the semi-magical elves not getting enough sunlight/exposure to the radiation of the underdark.
Or just ignore the whole curse thing altogether![]()
The "drow have black skin because they're cursed for being evil" is basically just the Curse of Ham. This group of people has black skin because they're evil. That is an indefensible part of D&D lore that came from the fact that D&D has misused subspecies in its past.
The point of my post is that you have to be careful when writing about stuff like this. Not that it's racist to make a reference to the Wicked Witch of the West. It's utterly ridiculous that that is somehow the point you got from my post.