Hussar
Legend
Also, @ pemerton, by the time Sam rescues Frodo, the nature of the orcs is so well established (in Mordor and Out) that Tolkein's work makes sense. Nor is what happens without consequences to the storyline.
RC
Oh pleaseohpleaseohpleaseohplease. Someone please quote my last post without the sblock tags so RC can see it. That's just way, way too funny.
Oh, and guys, I love you too.
No, it doesn't, because the rest of your post is devoted entirely to ignoring that dying in D&D doesn't equate to losing. There's still ways to be raised from the dead and, failing that, unlike Monopoly, you can make a new character. If you're really attached to the character, make sure your butt gets revived. And if you die at such a low level that you can't be revived, I admittingly find it rather odd that you'd be so attached in the first place.
How is character death, or at least permanent character death, not losing? Sure, you can make a new character. You can play Monopoly again. You still lost.
What about in the case of the entire party dying? Is that a "loss"?