Let's talk about "plot", "story", and "play to find out."


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The Market has, to a very large extent, said what it's been told to say.

While with D&D in particular because of its market-juggernaut status that could theoretically be true, it at least requires explaining why they would not be chasing the popular market rather than trying to make it; unlike some fields there's no self evident reason for them to do so. So if your claim is they swerved away from the popular rathet than toward it, I think its your obligation to at least present a credible reason they'd do that.
 

So when people select an RPG to play they are not making an informed choice, but are tricked by social pressure and marketing? Is marketing that powerful?

I'd say it largely depends on what "that powerful" means. There's a perennial argument about D&D's popularity, and how much of it is because of personal preference, and how much of it is because of its visibility and the network factors involved. Its an argument that never gets resolved because its an almost impossible question to test for in either direction.
 


Let's take this forum as an example. You as a mod occasionally have to punt individual people off the site due to their behavior. That's their fault, in the end; and everyone more or less accepts that. But if Morrus decided tomorrow to suspend all D&D and OSR discussion in these forums and change the forum's primary focus to PbtA games and their ilk, the long-time-active D&D and OSR fans here would have a legitimate case for feeling excluded; and not for anything that could be remotely considered as being their own fault. And yet the site would still be called ENWorld.
If he suspended all discussions, then you could not post about them and it would actually be exclusion. To continue the metaphor people are complaining that they are being excluded from threads that they can post in and read, but dislike and don't want to. That's not exclusion.

To argue that it is exclusion is to adopt a personal usage of exclusion that does not meet the actual meaning of the word.
 

If he suspended all discussions, then you could not post about them and it would actually be exclusion. To continue the metaphor people are complaining that they are being excluded from threads that they can post in and read, but dislike and don't want to. That's not exclusion.

To argue that it is exclusion is to adopt a personal usage of exclusion that does not meet the actual meaning of the word.
It's exclusion if the choice is made for you, even if unintentionally.

I can choose, as a hypothetical example, to not read any threads tagged "5e 2024". My ability to freely make that choice is what makes it non-exclusionary, as it's a choice I can unmake at any future time I want.

If someone else decides that henceforth all new threads will and must be about (and tagged) "5e 2024", however, then anyone not interested in those threads has, in slow motion as the old existing threads die away, been excluded even if that was not the intent.

See the difference?
 

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