Grazzt
Demon Lord
rounser said:Forsooth! Twould that be a protein polymorph in thy bag of tricks or art thou just happy to see me?![]()
Ah- but what about the Magnesium Spirit?
rounser said:Forsooth! Twould that be a protein polymorph in thy bag of tricks or art thou just happy to see me?![]()
ProfessorCirno said:That's really what it comes down to.
Do you know why latin, greek, etc languages are used to describe creatures? Because peasants DON'T NAME CREATURES. Dinosaurs aren't "bloodspikes" to them, nor are they "thunder lizards." They're "that 'orrible thing what lives in the forests and ate our Jan when he was just trying to get to mum's house."
IanB said:I'm not sure why I should think the fact that a bunch of monsters from Greek myths have Greek names (truly shocking) has anything to do with scholars naming monsters.
I'm firmly in the pro-behemoth camp. Naming things the same way modern scientists do is a bit immersion breaking for me.
I think most folks who pick up the books can keep the two mentally separated. They may have the same roots, but there is plenty of difference in their current gaming usage.pawsplay said:EDIT: And the behemoth/Bahamut thing just bugs me. It's the same name.
frankthedm said:I think most folks who pick up the books can see the difference between the two words. They may have the same roots, but there is plenty of difference in their current gaming usage.
MortalPlague said:I'm surprised nobody has touched on this one...
Unicorns - since when are they unaligned? Aren't they the very embodiment of good?
QFT!maggot said:The problem I see with Wordword Behemoth is this:
DM: A wordword behemoth charges you.
Player 1: A what?
DM: [Shows picture or mini]
Player 1: Oh, a T-Rex. I have to get out of here!
Alternative world where 4e designers used real-world words for things:
DM: A T-Rex charges you!
Player 1: I have to get out of here!
Why the extra baggage?