wow...that was just plain bad writing. Wonder if WoTC would have a libel case?
Let's be clear about this. It's not just Dungeons and Dragons that caused this murder, but the FOURTH edition in particular. This never would have happened if WotC had just kept updating 3.5. At least we have Pathfinder now, which personally saved my cat from a burning building. You know who set the fire? A copy of the 4e boxed set. Those things are evil.
Bishop, now a University of Alabama professor, and her husband James Anderson met and fell in love in a Dungeons & Dragons club while biology students at Northeastern University in the early 1980s, and were heavily into the fantasy role-playing board game, a source told the Herald.
I take no responsibility for the Herald! It was a laughing stock even before this.
Yes, what I read of the comments was pretty good to see. It's good to know people see through this kind of thingDon't worry. Did you read the comments section? As far as I can tell people won't take this kind of reporting seriously.
Libel isn't their preferred way of dealing with these things. They're too polite and, I'd say, above the folly of these things to take them on in those terms. Have a look at how they handled the McCain/Goldfarb smearing in 2008 here, and the result thereof.
To the contrary! The article is quite clear on the subject:
The blame here goes to the OSR crowd. I always suspected there was something fishy about those guys, but now we got unassailable evidence.
...and were heavily into the fantasy role-playing board game, a source told the Herald.
that was just a crappily written article. It's traditional, that the opening paragraphs summarize the crime, before going into the background of the accused. Thus far, I have no idea who she killed or why or even when.
All I got from that article was she is accused of killing somebody. Just like somebody in an unrelated and older case killed somebody. And they both had the same hobby. And somebody said something about the hobby or the murdered, though it was unclear who it was directed at.