hong said:That there's a monster labelled "oni" in W&M would seem to suggest there will be an OA at some stage.
If you tear off its bikini, will it try to marry you?
hong said:That there's a monster labelled "oni" in W&M would seem to suggest there will be an OA at some stage.
hong said:That there's a monster labelled "oni" in W&M would seem to suggest there will be an OA at some stage.
How can it; if one of the 10 major 4E world design philosphies is "The setting remained historic medieval world onto which fantasy elements were grafted. The two concept don't blend well"? IF a quasi Anglo/European fantasy setting doesn't work, why should a quasi Japanese/Oriental fantasy setting be fine? There is no reason for one to work and the other not that I can see.Fallen Seraph said:Well it may not be called OA but there could certainly be a setting that is more specific to those things.
Nope I reckon this is just now RAW as are shurikens. The 4E PoL setting is mix and match cultures, which I don't have a prob with. I jsut think it is ridiculous to say that the european fantasy mix doesn't work- it has for a long time and still does in a lot of literaturehong said:That there's a monster labelled "oni" in W&M would seem to suggest there will be an OA at some stage.
mach1.9pants said:Not really DnD is, and always has been, based on quasi medieval Europe. Other cultures are there but they are in campaign extras or different campaign worlds
Yeah as I edited above I don't see shurikens as a problem. I just really disagree that:scrubkai said:Lets see...
My 1978 PHB has Monks, Bo Sticks, Jo Sticks and Scimitars all of which are distinctly non-european. (Not to mention way too many french pole arms.)
So to me I don't see shuriken as being odd at all for D&D. It's always been an odd mixed bag of cultures thrown together for a game.
Not that it really matters! Nerd Ragemach1.9pants said:But I'll repeat, I like the cultural mix but the premise behind why they are doing it I think is poor.