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Jeremy Crawford Discusses Details on Custom Origins
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<blockquote data-quote="Chaosmancer" data-source="post: 8123877" data-attributes="member: 6801228"><p>So, I only need mechanical merits if I'm playing against type? I only need risks and rewards if I'm playing against type? What makes playing against type so special that I need mechanical risks and penalties to make it... what interesting to you? </p><p></p><p>I mean, if RP reasons aren't enough to support a character... what are we even doing here? That is basically what you are saying, right? If I want to not play a Dwarf Fighter, then I need more than just Role-playing, if all I have is role-playing then being a dwarf who isn't a fighter isn't worth it, it is meaningless.... but then what is a Dwarf Fighter? What meaning is there in that? No RP, No mechanics, no penalties... </p><p></p><p>You are accusing me of twisting words and arguments and making weak arguments, but you are literally saying that a character concept that goes against these sacred archetypes is somehow meaningless without penalties, yet the archetypes don't need anything. I don't need an RP reason to be a dwarf fighter, I don't need mechanical penalties to be a dwarf fighter... Dwarf Fighters just have meaning and merit because they exist? </p><p></p><p>I'm sorry, but no. You can't say that one type of build requires mechanical penalties to be meaningful, and the other build is meaningful simply for existing. That isn't how these things work. </p><p></p><p>----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------</p><p></p><p>Holy crap, you people have me agreeing with [USER=23751]@Maxperson[/USER] , what is the world coming to <img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite7" alt=":p" title="Stick out tongue :p" loading="lazy" data-shortname=":p" /></p><p></p><p></p><p>Wait... conversation has moved from playing against type to racial alignments, the world is right again <img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite7" alt=":p" title="Stick out tongue :p" loading="lazy" data-shortname=":p" /></p><p></p><p>(Not wanting to argue about alignment, because I have a much more fundamental problem with it, but I still agree with where you are going with the idea Max)</p><p></p><p>---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Well, before this thread gets closed, let me try and once more explain this to people, since they dont' seem to understand. </p><p></p><p></p><p>A few years ago, I finally learned what "cracker" meant in the context of white people. It was meant as a stand-in for cracking the whip. I had to finally ask a friend what it meant, because I had heard it constantly, but had no idea why people said that. </p><p></p><p>And... it doesn't bother me. I have no connection to that term, it doesn't really effect me at all. </p><p></p><p>I have a visceral, gut reaction of anger and bile in my throat to Yoda quotes (specifically "Do or Do not, there is no try") and "Run, Forrest Run." </p><p></p><p>I have those reactions because I was mocked in school with the "Run, Forrest Run" quote for... nearly four years. The Yoda quote was something my Father whom I have a terrible relationship with said constantly. </p><p></p><p>Every time I told him I would try something, he'd quote that. I'm trying something new, "Do or Do not, there is no try". Constantly, every day of my life, for easily a decade. He was making my life binary. I was either a failure or a success, attempting wasn't enough, putting forth effort wasn't enough. I was either succeeding or failing. </p><p></p><p>To this day, I cannot hear that quote without seeing that man's face and it driving me up the wall. </p><p></p><p></p><p>Yoda isn't real. Yoda is a fictional construct. Star Wars is just a story, and one that I mostly enjoy. But it also represents something that I don't want to deal with. It represents this binary world of success or failure that my father shoved down my throat constantly. </p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Now, I probably bored a couple of you, you probably don't care, but this is the point. That phrase gets to me, seeing that phrase hurts me. And I don't expect everyone to stop quoting Yoda just because my Father was a singular piece of crap. But if you can acknowledge that that can happen to me, with a popular piece of fictional media, can you acknowledge that nearly a hundred years of racism might seep into someone's psyche? That to them, seeing the way orcs are described, cutting so close to how their grandfather and great-grandfather were described and physically attacked for, might lead to a visceral response? </p><p></p><p></p><p>You keep saying "Fiction can't hurt people, fiction isn't real, these aren't people." Well, the hobbits weren't literally British boys fighting in the Trenches of WW1. Frodo isn't literally a man burdended by war and Post-Traumatic stress, fighting to reconnect to a world that is alien to him after what he has experienced. </p><p></p><p>If fiction can't hurt, it can't heal. If fantasy races can't be people, then Beowulf's Dragon can't represent Greed and the fight for Glory. Hundreds of tales from the YA section can't be about growing up, or depression, or relationships. </p><p></p><p>If Fiction can't hurt, it can't represent anything. And then it is pointless, meaningless. We use symbols, allusions, metaphors and dozens of other tools all the time to talk about things good, bad, simple and complex. Saying that this thing can't possibly be a symbol because it isn't literally that thing... it misses the point of fantasy entirely</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Chaosmancer, post: 8123877, member: 6801228"] So, I only need mechanical merits if I'm playing against type? I only need risks and rewards if I'm playing against type? What makes playing against type so special that I need mechanical risks and penalties to make it... what interesting to you? I mean, if RP reasons aren't enough to support a character... what are we even doing here? That is basically what you are saying, right? If I want to not play a Dwarf Fighter, then I need more than just Role-playing, if all I have is role-playing then being a dwarf who isn't a fighter isn't worth it, it is meaningless.... but then what is a Dwarf Fighter? What meaning is there in that? No RP, No mechanics, no penalties... You are accusing me of twisting words and arguments and making weak arguments, but you are literally saying that a character concept that goes against these sacred archetypes is somehow meaningless without penalties, yet the archetypes don't need anything. I don't need an RP reason to be a dwarf fighter, I don't need mechanical penalties to be a dwarf fighter... Dwarf Fighters just have meaning and merit because they exist? I'm sorry, but no. You can't say that one type of build requires mechanical penalties to be meaningful, and the other build is meaningful simply for existing. That isn't how these things work. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Holy crap, you people have me agreeing with [USER=23751]@Maxperson[/USER] , what is the world coming to :P Wait... conversation has moved from playing against type to racial alignments, the world is right again :P (Not wanting to argue about alignment, because I have a much more fundamental problem with it, but I still agree with where you are going with the idea Max) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Well, before this thread gets closed, let me try and once more explain this to people, since they dont' seem to understand. A few years ago, I finally learned what "cracker" meant in the context of white people. It was meant as a stand-in for cracking the whip. I had to finally ask a friend what it meant, because I had heard it constantly, but had no idea why people said that. And... it doesn't bother me. I have no connection to that term, it doesn't really effect me at all. I have a visceral, gut reaction of anger and bile in my throat to Yoda quotes (specifically "Do or Do not, there is no try") and "Run, Forrest Run." I have those reactions because I was mocked in school with the "Run, Forrest Run" quote for... nearly four years. The Yoda quote was something my Father whom I have a terrible relationship with said constantly. Every time I told him I would try something, he'd quote that. I'm trying something new, "Do or Do not, there is no try". Constantly, every day of my life, for easily a decade. He was making my life binary. I was either a failure or a success, attempting wasn't enough, putting forth effort wasn't enough. I was either succeeding or failing. To this day, I cannot hear that quote without seeing that man's face and it driving me up the wall. Yoda isn't real. Yoda is a fictional construct. Star Wars is just a story, and one that I mostly enjoy. But it also represents something that I don't want to deal with. It represents this binary world of success or failure that my father shoved down my throat constantly. Now, I probably bored a couple of you, you probably don't care, but this is the point. That phrase gets to me, seeing that phrase hurts me. And I don't expect everyone to stop quoting Yoda just because my Father was a singular piece of crap. But if you can acknowledge that that can happen to me, with a popular piece of fictional media, can you acknowledge that nearly a hundred years of racism might seep into someone's psyche? That to them, seeing the way orcs are described, cutting so close to how their grandfather and great-grandfather were described and physically attacked for, might lead to a visceral response? You keep saying "Fiction can't hurt people, fiction isn't real, these aren't people." Well, the hobbits weren't literally British boys fighting in the Trenches of WW1. Frodo isn't literally a man burdended by war and Post-Traumatic stress, fighting to reconnect to a world that is alien to him after what he has experienced. If fiction can't hurt, it can't heal. If fantasy races can't be people, then Beowulf's Dragon can't represent Greed and the fight for Glory. Hundreds of tales from the YA section can't be about growing up, or depression, or relationships. If Fiction can't hurt, it can't represent anything. And then it is pointless, meaningless. We use symbols, allusions, metaphors and dozens of other tools all the time to talk about things good, bad, simple and complex. Saying that this thing can't possibly be a symbol because it isn't literally that thing... it misses the point of fantasy entirely [/QUOTE]
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