As has been said so very many times before, none of us has seen the BoVD yet. Certainly the marketing has sometimes taken a sensational tone, but it's mere speculation to suggest that the actual content of the book is designed for those with immature sensibilities.Silverthrone said:These books are just an attempt to sell something kewl to the hormone huggers.
It is like Wizard the Guide to Comics one said of the Mature Auidences label appiled to comics (Paraphrased, it has been a while.)
Hey kids, buy this book. Your parents won't like it...
It is a bogus attempt to sell something to the immature.
Psion said:
Originally posted by The Sigil
You know, maybe I'm the only one, but I didn't leave D&D because "it wasn't edgy enough." I left D&D because of power creep and because they pushed into product lines I had no interest in. I left D&D not because, "you know, this just isn't evil enough" but because, "you know, these rules are self-contradictory and silly - and why are they making FR NPCs demigods, anyway?" I left because "the game is becoming based on the novels, rather than vice versa." Never did it enter my mind that, "you know what would be great? If D&D were more vile like these other systems."
I so agree. I implore anyone else who happens to feel this way to send a letter to the editor of Dragon to let them know this.
Thoughtfulness, intelligence, and creativity are ingredients that will push the D&D game into the future. Invoking necrophilia and tentacle porn will just get you lumped in the b-movie shock-horror flicks and hentai, and all the esteem that comes with that.
Silverthrone said:
The Sigili and Psion, you put it perfectly. The reason I believe D&D can be lame is the immaturity of it's rules as a system for resolving combat and defining chracters, not it's content. Content is and should be depedent upon the DM.
Books like BoVD are written to explain something that those who are ready for it do not need explained.