Bedrockgames
I post in the voice of Christopher Walken
Thank you!Congratulations on reaching enlightenment. Now work to get your fellow countrymen to the same level.

Thank you!Congratulations on reaching enlightenment. Now work to get your fellow countrymen to the same level.
Where does it say that? Because Orcs haven't been universally evil, never mind unredeemable, for decades, if ever.The game literally justifies killing orcs on site by saying they are unredeemable monsters.
I mean, we've been reasoning with orcs and wondering what to do with orc children since murder of the helpless is bad since 1e and we were in junior high school.You have it backwards. People don't mistreat people like they are orcs, they treat orcs as people they don't like.
Look at the terms used to classically describe orcs. Primitive, savage, stupid, aggressive, lazy, violent, antisocial, inhumane. Those words didn't exist to describe orcs, they described a lot of people's who used them to justify mistreatment and worse. People take the same words, the same notions, they used to describe various minorities and use them to describe orcs and goblins because even if they aren't 1:1 stand-ins for specific groups (and sometimes they are, Orcs of Thar) you get to apply the and emotional response to them that you could to a minority group.
And that's actually where the problem lies. It's not that the average D&D player fought orcs and said "wow, this feels like I'm beating up minorities", it's that it normalizes the idea that it's ok to hate people who are viewed as primitive and evil. You can't reason with them, you only put them to the sword. The game literally justifies killing orcs on site by saying they are unredeemable monsters. And once you forge a link between a group of people being unredeemable and violence, you are much more willing to accept (even in you aren't actively engaged in) violence against them.
Please. Check the 2014 Monster Manual on how orcs are described.Where does it say that? Because Orcs haven't been universally evil, never mind unredeemable, for decades, if ever.
In 3e nearly half of all orcs were not the alignment listed in the MM.Where does it say that? Because Orcs haven't been universally evil, never mind unredeemable, for decades, if ever.
Nothing there says or implies irredeemable, or that every last one of them is evil. Even the death knight, an evil undead monster, is immortal until redeemed.Please. Check the 2014 Monster Manual on how orcs are described.
The shift from always-evil monsters to characters capable of holding any alignment and behavior certainly has been evolving for decades. But the problem is hardly solved and done.
I don't disagree that the portrayal or orcs has been problematic. I was querying the specific claim. Where does it literally justify killing orcs on site by saying they are unredeemable monsters?Please. Check the 2014 Monster Manual on how orcs are described.
The shift from always-evil monsters to characters capable of holding any alignment and behavior certainly has been evolving for decades. But the problem is hardly solved and done.
And that's actually where the problem lies. It's not that the average D&D player fought orcs and said "wow, this feels like I'm beating up minorities", it's that it normalizes the idea that it's ok to hate people who are viewed as primitive and evil. You can't reason with them, you only put them to the sword. The game literally justifies killing orcs on site by saying they are unredeemable monsters. And once you forge a link between a group of people being unredeemable and violence, you are much more willing to accept (even in you aren't actively engaged in) violence against them.
In the 2014 Monster Manual. Orcs are portrayed as evil, savage monsters.I don't disagree that the portrayal or orcs has been problematic. I was querying the specific claim. Where does it literally justify killing orcs on site by saying they are unredeemable monsters?
It does not, however, say that this is universally so - in fact, it details an exception in the form of Obould Many-arrows. Nor does it say they are unredeemable.In the 2014 Monster Manual. Orcs are portrayed as evil, savage monsters.
While it doesn't literally say, "and that means you can slaughter them without remorse." That is the obvious implication.
Please.