Maxperson
Morkus from Orkus
That right there is a huge red flag.It's VERY LITERALLY "I would like to play a tortle, because I think tortles are cool."
That right there is a huge red flag.It's VERY LITERALLY "I would like to play a tortle, because I think tortles are cool."
It seems my read of your position was spot on!Hold on just a minute there, pardner...you're overstating my position just a bit.
I have no antipathy for teamwork where participating in said teamwork is a) my proactive choice and b) has a sound rationale behind it. If being part of the team is the best/safest choice for my character's perspective, then I'll happily stick with the team because that's what the character would do.
What I greatly prefer to avoid is teamwork where I'm forced to participate, even worse if it's teamwork just for the sake of teamwork without any further supporting rationale. In game, these instances often run afoul of my "do what the character would do" mantra, where a character's obvious best move in the fiction is to act alone but (and this I do dislike) meta considerations dictate keeping the party together.
Not really sure why my standard is relevant, to be perfectly honest.I never used ‘it’s not in the PHB’ as my argument, so not sure what you think you nixed
the objection that they are not in the PHB? So we are on the same page here, it is not relevant whether they are in the PHB or not.
To take this further, would you then expect a DM to accept all WotC material and do you draw a line at third party material, or should they accept that too, after all your selling point was ‘embrace the limitless creativity’?
you are the one making the argument that a DM has to have a good reason to exclude something and that one person’s ‘it is OP’ is just another person’s ‘it is good’. So either your standard is relevant or why might just all go on our merry way and not care about the case you are trying to makeNot really sure why my standard is relevant, to be perfectly honest.
Even more than that, "Stupidly OP" and "A pretty good spell" are the exact same thing. One DM's OP is another DMs pretty good spell, which is the third DMs it's an okay spell.The two bolded things are IME often said about the same thing, whatever that thing might be: DMs tend to say the first while players tend to say the second.
It's like 183(includes all the variants) for 5e, but god forbid one of them isn't included in a setting.As an example: when there's only seven PC-playable species (as was the case in 1979 1e) banning one of them is a pretty big deal and thus not done lightly. But when there's about 50 PC-playables* as is the case today, banning one or two or even five of them almost falls into the "who cares?" category.
* - or whatever the number is these days, it's a long time since I counted 'em.
I'm all for curation. I'm simply opposed to curation that's happening strictly within the DM's purview and not in a discussion with the players.and so that's the constructive purpose of curation, taking, or excluding, with intention, pieces to create a setting that evokes a coherent mood, tone, aesthetic, to enhance the play experience by the intentionality of what we create.
I've played in a no elf setting. It didn't bother me at all, because there are other fun playable races. My ability to have fun isn't limited to elf only.Absolutely not, unless you think something being playable makes it interchangeable.
Or do you think grognards would tolerate elves getting banned?
The point I want to make is that there is a gap between "inclusion" and "exclusion". Like, triton is an ancestry in Mordenkainen's. I have never once used or seen that race in any game I run. I have no idea where they would crop up in any game I'm running. I don't have them "included" in my setting.It's like 183 for 5e, but god forbid one of them isn't included in a setting.![]()
In my game dragonborn are not low power. They are about a CR 3 or 4 and not at all appropriate for PC play.What's wrong with them? They're a core race, low power,