It's funny how perceptions work. I love football. I'm a high school football coach, I played college football, and it is a great thinking man's game. I love D&D. I play D&D now, I played FRPs in college, and it's a great thinking person's game. I'm always sorry to see stereotypes put forth about football players being idiots and D&D players being geeks.
I'll share a story about perceptions: Back in highschool I ran a D&D group. The group consisted of 3 offensive linemen, a noseguard, a linebacker, and a running back. We met every Sunday night and pretty much all we talked about all week was girls, football, and D&D. We assumed in our own little bubble that pretty much all gamers were like us. One year, 1983, GenCon fell on the weekend before football practice was to begin. We decided at our summer football camp we would all go.
Six football players, two of which had since moved on to college, piled into a vehicle and made the trek to Kenosha, WI. (At least I think that's where it was that year). We went to GenCon and piled out of the vehicle. Across the parking lot we see a massively obese woman, in a chainmail bikini, with fairy wings on her back - we quickly figured out we were not in fact the stereotypical D&D players. We still had a great time and continued to play.
One of the things that has happened in the intervening years is knowledge of the D&D game has spread and with it, the stereotypes. Not every D&D player is a smelly fatbeard and not every football player is an idiot. Now rabid NFL fans on the other hand....
