Hussar
Legend
Kaodi said:You could think of it this way: How would you depict a nymph interacting with a party of all female adventurers?
Bow chicka bow wow...

Sorry, couldn't resist.
Kaodi said:You could think of it this way: How would you depict a nymph interacting with a party of all female adventurers?
This is beyond ridiculous. D&D catering to white men isn't hurting anyone.
You might disagree with it and want them to expand their market
That would be like saying that the NFL and NBA catering to men who like sports is hurting men who don't like sports, or that romance novels catering to women is hurting men.
Using that sort of reasoning, you could claim that D&D was hurting jocks because it wasn't marketed at them, which I think we'll all agree is...foolish.
D&D was created out of a predominantly male culture that focused on strategic wargaming. This was primarily a male pursuit because, on the whole, women aren't that interested in simulating fights between dudes stabbing each other. Given that D&D focuses on simulating fights between dudes stabbing each other, women are less interested in the hobby than other, traditionally feminine pursuits.
I also realize that if I were to go up to the average woman and say, "Hey, you want to play in this fantasy game where you make a character and kill trolls and ogres and get treasure?" she would look at me funny and go back to whatever it is women do in their spare time. (That last bit is a joke.)
Niche markets have always existed. They will continue to exist. Lorraine Williams tried to turn D&D from a niche market product into a product for everyone. It failed because turning a game that focuses on trolls, wizards, and d20s is not a product that will appeal to everyone. Turning it into something else might be well-intentioned, but it is foolhardy.
I have no issue with including more "diverse" art in D&D. But let's not pretend that the reason there are few female D&D players is because of sexism.
When I ask for a non-sexualized nymph, I mean a nymph that is carrying along with her life without holding her breath waiting for the next man to come her way. You could think of it this way: How would you depict a nymph interacting with a party of all female adventurers?
Edit: I take the person who decided to quit EN World was Balsamic Dragon?
I think this is a pretty narrow view of the situation, and borders on blaming the victim.If she's unable to post in an environment where people might disagree with her without suffering emotional distress, then it's better for her not to post here. I'd recommend RPG.net if she wants a feminist "safe zone."
In my mind, nymphs are beautiful because they personify the beauty of nature. They are lovely because a field of flowers is lovely. They are beautiful because a mountain vista is beautiful. They are bare because nature provides all the clothing nature needs.
There's nothing in my mind inherently female about that. Beauty, power, majesty, nudity, but not femininity.
So in my mind, nymphs should be just as often male as female. And their beauty isn't gender dependent -- a nude man-nymph should blind anyone who beholds their true beauty. At that point, the beauty is a magical force, not an aesthetic.
< . . . snip . . . >
Succubi fall into a different camp. A succubi might be basically genderless, able to take on any form that suits it, male or female. The point is seduction, and that also has no inherent gender. . . .
tuxego said:Yer Latin's impoverished, Good Sir!