fuindordm
Adventurer
Why is it that every edition of D&D has been swimming in elves?
It looks like 4E is keeping up the tradition, and while I love most of what I've heard so far I find this disappointing.
So far we're getting eladrin, elves, half-elves, and drow. If drow are significantly different from eladrin, perhaps we will end up with "shadow elves" and "half-shadow elves" as well.
I really don't understand the point. Are the roles played by these variants really so distinct that so many different races are needed? Are we really going to have half of the PH race quota taken up by elf variants?
If we're getting only six races to play with in the first PH, why can't they be Human, Elf, Dwarf, Halfling, Orc, and Tiefling? I'm sick of half-races.
If a player wants to be half-whatever, let them spend a feat at first level to get a single feature from some other race. Then our precious PH pages can be devoted to distinct and flavorful options, not "shades of elf".
It looks like 4E is keeping up the tradition, and while I love most of what I've heard so far I find this disappointing.
So far we're getting eladrin, elves, half-elves, and drow. If drow are significantly different from eladrin, perhaps we will end up with "shadow elves" and "half-shadow elves" as well.
I really don't understand the point. Are the roles played by these variants really so distinct that so many different races are needed? Are we really going to have half of the PH race quota taken up by elf variants?
If we're getting only six races to play with in the first PH, why can't they be Human, Elf, Dwarf, Halfling, Orc, and Tiefling? I'm sick of half-races.
If a player wants to be half-whatever, let them spend a feat at first level to get a single feature from some other race. Then our precious PH pages can be devoted to distinct and flavorful options, not "shades of elf".