You must be an absolute delight at an art gallery.
And be that as it may. I feel it is unnecessary to quibble about how excellent excellent is.Be that as it may, that merely means that elves have better vision compared to humans. An elf might still have poorer eyesight than elves typically have, and wish to correct that with glasses. I assume that the structural eye issues that affect vision in humans can exist in other species too. There probably are hawks with "poor vision" for a hawk, even though that poor vision might still be better than human vision. Now hawks have hard time accessing eye glasses, but that's not necessarily true for elves.
And ultimately in a game this glasses thing is really about aesthetics and representation. If a person wants their nerdy elf to have glasses in a setting where that technology exists because they think that fits the imagery they want, let them!
Heh. The last glasses I had fell into the ocean. I was looking down at the waves, there was a seabreeze, that was that. For me, dealing with glasses feels like a nuisance. Similarly, I dont wear a wristwatch.If you have to faff about switching eyes with contact lenses, why don't you wear glasses? They are quick and easy to take on and off, and don't make you eyes sore.
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Aside from the diversity, including fantasy diversity such as species, most of them appear young.
And you have never lost a contact lens?! Your glasses didn't fit properly, go to a better optician.Heh. The last glasses I had fell into the ocean.
This is why I don't trust this newfangled '80s stuff. Back in the '70s, we understood what fantasy was REALLY about./s
The wizard on the cover of The Secret of Bone Hill is too "Marvel Super Hero-ish" with the skin-tight lycra and high cowl. The wizard is clearly a rip off of the Scarlet Witch and Dr. Strange. Where is her tome, staff, or even backpack? It's obvious that the broken staff and the book on the ground belong to the spellcasting skeleton she's whuppin'.
Heh, I have never had a problem with contact lenses. I set it and forget it.And you have never lost a contact lens?! Your glasses didn't fit properly, go to a better optician.
I clearly said "ideals" of beauty, plural. There are many ways to be beautiful.
In D&D traditions, there are over a hundred different kinds of Elves, conducively different ethnicities. And each ethnicity has a wide array of appearances, such as Drow with skin from silvery white to obsidian black, and ranges of grays of various hues like bluish or purplish, in between. All of these forms express various cultural ideals of beauty.
All Elves officially have "keen senses", especially eyesight and hearing. If there even exists an Elf who lacks keen eyesight, it is a remarkable anomaly.
I appreciate this way of explaining where you are coming from better.
At the same time, I disagree with your premise.
I am nearsighted but dont care. Contact lenses work fine for me. (I wear one lens at a time, and alternate right or left.) If I personally could cast the Heal spell and conveniently see fully without contact lenses, I would do so immediately.
At the same, for many reasons, all Elves have good eyesight.
I was replying to a hypothetical that it was a thing wizards do, with the implication it was therefore common to that class?
It is true that Elf culture cares about clothing and fashion.So since glasses are part of an ideal of beauty, there would be elves that wear glasses. Just like there would be elves that are large and muscular, or elves that are curvy. All of which are cultural ideals of beauty that go beyond skin color, which is the only aspect you just listed.
Apparently, there are no Elves born deaf or blind.So it is impossible for an elf to have poor eyesight for an elf, and use corrective lenses to achieve more than human sight? There are no elves born blind or deaf? There could not have been a magical incident that damaged an elf's eyesight? All of that would be under "remarkable anomalies"?
Heh, something like that.Right, you would make that choice, therefore you don't think it makes sense to depict powerful, beautiful people with glasses, because glasses are not for the powerful, the magically capable or the beautiful. They are only for those who lack those qualities.