Mainstream News Discovers D&D's Species Terminology Change

The New York Times sparked a wave of culture war outrage over Dungeons & Dragons.

orcs dnd.jpg


Several mainstream news sites have discovered that Dungeons & Dragons now refers to a character's species instead of race. The New York Times ended 2024 with a profile on Dungeons & Dragons, with a specific focus on the 2024 Player's Handbook's changes on character creation, the in-game terminology change from race to species, and the removal of Ability Score Increases tied to a character's species. The article included quotes by Robert J. Kuntz and John Stavropoulos and also referenced Elon Musk's outrage over Jason Tondro's forward in The Making of Original Dungeons & Dragons.

The piece sparked additional commentary on a variety of sites, including Fox News and The Telegraph, most of which focused on how the changes were "woke." Around the same time, Wargamer.com published a more nuanced piece about the presentation of orcs in the 2024 Player's Handbook, although its headline noted that the changes were "doomed" because players would inevitably replace the orc's traditional role as aggressor against civilization with some other monstrous group whose motivations and sentience would need to be ignored in order for adventurers to properly bash their heads in.

[Update--the Guardian has joined in also, now.]

Generally speaking, the mainstream news pieces failed to address the non-"culture war" reasons for many of these changes - namely that Dungeons & Dragons has gradually evolved from a game that promoted a specific traditional fantasy story to a more generalized system meant to capture any kind of fantasy story. Although some campaign settings and stories certainly have and still do lean into traditional fantasy roles, the kinds that work well with Ability Score Increases tied to a character's species/race, many other D&D campaigns lean away from these aspects or ignore them entirely. From a pragmatic standpoint, uncoupling Ability Score Increases from species not only removes the problematic bioessentialism from the game, it also makes the game more marketable to a wider variety of players.

Of course, the timing of many of these pieces is a bit odd, given that the 2024 Player's Handbook came out months ago and Wizards of the Coast announced plans to make these changes back in 2022. It's likely that mainstream news is slow to pick up on these types of stories. However, it's a bit surprising that some intrepid reporter didn't discover these changes for four months given the increased pervasiveness of Dungeons & Dragons in mainstream culture.

We'll add that EN World has covered the D&D species/race terminology changes as they developed and looks forward to covering new developments and news about Dungeons & Dragons in 2025 and beyond.
 

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Christian Hoffer

Christian Hoffer


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Remathilis

Legend
Not even biological heritage?
heritage noun

1: property that descends to an heir
2
a: something transmitted by or acquired from a predecessor : legacy, inheritance
proud of her Chinese heritage
a rich heritage of folklore
The battlefields are part of our heritage and should be preserved.
b: tradition
the party's heritage of secularism
3: something possessed as a result of one's natural situation or birth : birthright
the heritage of natural freedom was long since cast away
—V. L. Parrington

Is darkvision property? A legacy or inheritance? A tradition? Or a birthright?

The issue is that heritage is something that can be lost, or perhaps not acquired in the first place. Elf is not that, unless the state of being an elf is something that can be gained or lost by an individual.
 

The issue is that heritage is something that can be lost, or perhaps not acquired in the first place. Elf is not that, unless the state of being an elf is something that can be gained or lost by an individual.
Considering the number of Transmutation spells in D&D, an elf can certainly lose, either temporarily or permanently, their elfness.
 

Micah Sweet

Level Up & OSR Enthusiast
heritage noun

1: property that descends to an heir
2
a: something transmitted by or acquired from a predecessor : legacy, inheritance
proud of her Chinese heritage
a rich heritage of folklore
The battlefields are part of our heritage and should be preserved.
b: tradition
the party's heritage of secularism
3: something possessed as a result of one's natural situation or birth : birthright
the heritage of natural freedom was long since cast away
—V. L. Parrington

Is darkvision property? A legacy or inheritance? A tradition? Or a birthright?

The issue is that heritage is something that can be lost, or perhaps not acquired in the first place. Elf is not that, unless the state of being an elf is something that can be gained or lost by an individual.
2a and 3 seem appropriate to A5e's usage.
 



Oofta

Legend
Supporter
heritage noun

1: property that descends to an heir
2
a: something transmitted by or acquired from a predecessor : legacy, inheritance
proud of her Chinese heritage
a rich heritage of folklore
The battlefields are part of our heritage and should be preserved.
b: tradition
the party's heritage of secularism
3: something possessed as a result of one's natural situation or birth : birthright
the heritage of natural freedom was long since cast away
—V. L. Parrington

Is darkvision property? A legacy or inheritance? A tradition? Or a birthright?

The issue is that heritage is something that can be lost, or perhaps not acquired in the first place. Elf is not that, unless the state of being an elf is something that can be gained or lost by an individual.

People refer to the human race referring to our species, so I can see how you could use race instead of the broader species. But heritage? It has nothing to do with biology. It's also just as problematic as race if not moreso.
 

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