There is a huge teen market for fantasy literature. D&D should be courting this market. If that means copying Scholastic printing conventions, sobeit.
This and then some. My daughter is going through these 100-or-so page young readers fantasy books faster than the library can get them in. There's a bazillion* Young Jedi Whatever Star Wars ones just a shelf over. Why not D&D based fantasy, too?
*Yes, a full bazillion. I asked the librarian.
*blinks* err, what? A polytheistic worldview is not an anti-Christian worldview, it's just a non-Christian worldview.Context DOES matter...and most of the game's attackers will point out that its default settings include a polytheistic- thus anti-Christian- worldview.
You mean by pointing out the existence of hinge like Testament?
That only gets you so far- that isn't a baseline product, it's a supplement. It still doesn't get you past the default polytheistic assumptions of most FRPGs. And polytheism is fundamentally at odds with Christianity, even though such a worldview can result in identical moral/ethical viewpoints.
Now, using those facts to set an anti-RPG stance in general IS quite unwarranted.
Honestly in our high-school-era campaigning, you couldn't tell a big difference between what we were doing and Grand Theft Auto With Swords.
*blinks* err, what? A polytheistic worldview is not an anti-Christian worldview, it's just a non-Christian worldview.
Try telling that to someone who is a fundamentalist Christian. They probably won't agree that there is a distinction.