Why is that pushback inevitable? You have the books with the art that you like? What's it to you that some new books get published with different art?
In my view, any healing spell of slot 6 or higher can reverse aging and remedy inherited dangers. The Heal spell literally "ends blindness" and "any diseases" − including age related illnesses.What about failing sight due to old age? Does Heal or Restoration work on that? Will it regrow my hair? Restore its colour? Fix arthritis or worn joints? If so, do adventurers who are routinely subjected to healing magic never age? If that’s the case, then the image of an old Gandalf-style wizard would be just as out of place as a simple pair of glasses.
How much less?I could care less.
True, it is a common phenomenon. I find it particularly perplexing when people have an obvious favourite past edition and their main gripe about the current/new edition is that it is not like that past edition. WotC will not confiscate your old books! If you like them better, just keep using them instead!But the reality is; Lots of people like to play with the current edition.
And people want the current edition to reflect their needs and wants.
If it doesn't, they tend to complain.
Entire edition wars have been waged for that very reason.
Uh oh!
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Not only is that interpretation completely unsupported by the rules (short-sidedness is NOT a disease) it is also anti-inclusive. People who wear glasses, or use a wheelchair or whatever, want to see people like them represented in game.In my view, any healing spell of slot 6 or higher can reverse aging and remedy inherited dangers. The Heal spell literally "ends blindness" and "any diseases" − including age related illnesses.
Likewise higher slot spells like Regenerate and Wish and so on can refresh youthfulness or grant eternal youth.
Gandalf specifically chooses to appear as he does. He is physically fit and combat able.
Sure, but I doubt they are getting their portraits painted while adventuring in a dungeon or something.Life for an adventurer would be much easier if they wore full face helmets too, but they rarely do when they have their portrait painted.
I understand your position, but frankly unless people are citing facts about something, etc. everything is personal opinion. I really shouldn't have to state that explicitly. I've done so in my last several posts (e.g. IMO, to me, my opinion) because others seems to overlook that if I am speaking about something for myself, it is always my opinion.So, the question each should to ask themselves is - did I explicitly phrase it as my own feeling (or how I would run it, etc) when I said it? Or, did I leave that assumed/implicit/unsaid?
I'm not going to trace up through the thread to see if you did this, in particular. But we see this time and again - folks will state their personal opinion without any such qualifiers clearly stated, and then getting all surprised when folks read the text as written.
Mostly I agree with this, with the sole exception of heal and blindness/deafness. Lesser restoration is a DM call, one I personally support to help with vision impairment (not full blindness, which I realize now heal would handle).Regarding eyesight and healing magic, I’d definitely say that’s a DM call, and not one explicitly supported by the text.
We know D&D doesn't deal with such things explicitly other than blinded/deafened "conditions" and complete blindness/deafness. So, yeah, largely DM calls. Frankly, if a player wanted greater restoration or regeneration to regrow hair, have at it.What about failing sight due to old age? Does Heal or Restoration work on that? Will it regrow my hair? Restore its colour? Fix arthritis or worn joints? If so, do adventurers who are routinely subjected to healing magic never age? If that’s the case, then the image of an old Gandalf-style wizard would be just as out of place as a simple pair of glasses.
But I am staunchly opposed to the success of Isekai (given it really is "the worst" of anime, by and large - it doesn't even usually have good animation or fights! The lowest possible standard for Shonen-style anime!) and follow a lot of Gen Z accounts on various social media that I think will tip me off if it ever goes mainstream in the West - thankfully it has not so far!
Heck, if you go down the rabbit hole of various regional and historical Rites and such, you can add pink ("Rose"), baby blue, navy blue. And black to the list.I assume that a lot of people associate white and gold with Catholic priestly vestments since white is the color worn on Christmas and Easter, which would be times when more attention is given to Masses than other times of year. In reality, speaking as an altar boy from some time ago (and, as the article you linked shows, nothing has changed in the meantime), green is actually the most common color worn by Catholic priests simply because most of the year is in Ordinary Time which is when that color is worn. White and violet would vie for second place, with red bring behind those, and with rose bring worn only on two days.
Better than Forgotten Realms, that's for sure!Several posters have said this wizard gives MTG vibes. Several other posters have pointed out that that Strixhaven is a D&D setting. Which got me thinking:
How fast would the D&D corner of the internet explode if the sample setting in the DMG was Dominaria?