KYRON45
Hero
In a medieval society you wouldn’t have any savings. You basically get paid for your work in food.Where would you keep your savings in a medieval society?
In a medieval society you wouldn’t have any savings. You basically get paid for your work in food.Where would you keep your savings in a medieval society?
Good point. Coin should be with the merchants and the lords, under lock and key most of the time and under guard.In a medieval society you wouldn’t have any savings. You basically get paid for your work in food.
Oh come on man, a product designed for new players, many of whom have never played D&D, should go easy on sticky moral quandaries. There are topics the game should always be careful when dealing with: genocide, racism, slavery, sexual assault, and violence against children being top among them. Those topics require a level of sensitivity and care that quite frankly isn't possible in a mass-produced game box sold on Target and Walmart shelves. New DMs don't know about session 0, lines and veils, and other tools needed to keep players comfortable and safe at the table.Since this specific issue is clearly a big problem for you and your group, you are reminded that perfectly welcome to ignore it at your table.
It’s quite disturbing that you believe there are groups it won’t be a big problem for.Since this specific issue is clearly a big problem for you and your group, you are reminded that perfectly welcome to ignore it at your table.
Thorny moral issues are not a big problem for every group. Some people like an opportunity to wrestle with difficult questions, and being interested in exploring that is not disturbing, and I resent the implication.It’s quite disturbing that you believe there are groups it won’t be a big problem for.
This is a product aimed at 12 year olds and completely new players.Thorny moral issues are not a big problem for every group. Some people like an opportunity to wrestle with difficult questions, and being interested in exploring that is not disturbing, and I resent the implication.
However, @Remathilis is, I think, correct: it is not a good fit for a starter adventure.
That would have to be anwered by the GreyLord (whom I believed coined the term).
Aside from the tusked bit, that could be said about various bellicose humans as well.
Dunno. Never played 4e
That looks like the 3e reimagining of orcs where they went from LE in AD&D to CE in 3e.
This is the first D&D orc image that I ever saw (1e MM):
View attachment 378205
Here's from the 2e Monstrous Manual.
View attachment 378207
This is a product aimed at 12 year olds and completely new players.
But it's fine, because there was absolutely no reason for the goblinoid children to be present in the original adventure (other than the insensitivity of the author). As has been pointed out many times, the living arrangements of the humanoids in the original module made no sense whatsoever (why do they live in racially segregated but adjacent caves? Why are there no guards on the complex itself? Why do the not react when their next door neighbours are murdered? Where is their food supply? Where is their water supply? How do they deal with their waste? Why don't they build better defences? Where do their weapons come from?). Once you fix that the children are gone, so there is no reason for this to not be a starter adventure.
This is completely and utterly nonsense. There is no such unifying concept.Creatures of Chaos.
It's actually more of an older idea, inspired by things that D&D originally were inspired from.
LotR was just one inspiration, but Cthulu,, Moorcock, and others also had an equally heavy inspiration (and threatened lawsuits as well!). Conan and Howard were other inspirations (as well as a whole slew of others that actually got mentioned from time to time and...well...if you look hard enough you may even find a LIST
No, it’s not an insult to point out that someone had a fairly narrow upbringing. It’s not their fault after all.Are you trying to toss a personal insult or slander at someone??
It was the 1970s, not the Middle Ages! I was there, I remember them (although I didn’t read the adventure in question until the early 80s). Most people did not believe that there were people who were so irredeemably evil that it was okay to kill their children!I actually agree, with MODERN DAY understandings and HOW MODERN DAY players play the game

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.