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    Kelemvor

    On the contrary, I think the Wall absolutely makes sense in a polytheistic religious setting, where gods compete for worshippers. For starters, it incentivises mortals to pick a god, so it benefits deities of every alignment. Even with the good gods, worship is a matter of a mutually beneficial...
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    D&D 5E 5e's new gender policy - is it attracting new players?

    That's not actually what I said, nor would I ever argue that. I said that sexuality is a social and cultural construct, by which I mean that we create categories such as hetero- and homosexual and then try to fit people into each neat box, and that therefore this doesn't work for cultures...
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    D&D 5E 5e's new gender policy - is it attracting new players?

    I'm afraid that just isn't the case, as ancient Greece and Rome clearly show; sexuality is not purely defined by biology, it is a social and cultural construct. Their religions made no moral judgements about same-sex relations, and indeed their gods took both male and female lovers (the...
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    D&D 5E 5e's new gender policy - is it attracting new players?

    I apologise if this post comes off as lecturing, gender and sexuality are my main focus as a historian so I would just like to correct some misunderstandings in the thread regarding their place in history. The idea that including LGBT characters in a medieval fantasy setting would be...
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