D&D General The New York Times on D&D


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and so does species, because all terms we ever came up with do not account for mechanical ‘life’
Kindred would have been a reasonable choice. Doesn’t need to be strictly biological nor strict and rigorous in a scientific sense.
 






I think we are being willfully blind if we don't recognize that using the term species to describe people will not rise up and haunt us someday.
Species has a history of being used to promote racism (scientific racism was based on the idea that humans could be grouped into different species or subspecies, and they used race to essentially mean subspecies if I recall correctly). Lineage, ancestry, bloodlines have all been similarly used. I doubt there is a term that can be used to draw distinction between groups that doesn’t have some king of history to it.

That said, and as much as I think changing from race to species is a bad idea for D&D, it isn’t a problem in D&D for the same reason race wasn’t: humans are treated as belonging to the same species. I think it was better to have all humans be the same race. Worrying about fictional races or species seems pretty pointless to me
 


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