HardcoreDandDGirl
First Post
ok...Ok, you suckered me back in.![]()
I quoted you... you said whistle blower... I never used that before you...I do not equate this with a whistle blower. It really is not important enough for that. I did not bring that term into the conversation, I brought the term rabble-rouser in because that's closer to how I view it.
yes you made uo a hypothetical worst case scenero where instead of honest debate helping to shape how things move forward some dire consqunce that you in no way can link to this might happen...Funny, that's your spin on what I said. I was talking about real world journalists blowing this topic up so much out of proportion that someone loses their job.
I"m not asking for someone to loose there job... I'm asking to talk in a public forum about this and maybe get enough head of steam up to effect change moving forward...Personally, someone losing their job is more important to me, and it should be to you, than your personal sensibilities being offended by fictional infant monsters. Are your offended sensibilities more important than someone else's job?
um...No. If someone posts something on a blog and someone else loses their job over it for no real good reason (which I think that you and I can both agree, this is not important enough for someone to lose their job over), than that person was a moronic blogger.
Our social media is way out of control and it's only getting worse. People do lose their jobs over the most trivial of facebook/twitter/blog reasons.


yea... maybe you should take this argument to someone trying to do that and just argue with us about D&DWould you like it if you lost your job because of something trivial that you wrote? This is a small number of monsters where the vast majority of gamers and virtually no non-gamers would have ever noticed this. And of those gamers that do notice it, very few consider it important.
so that half of your post was?Yes, you are entitled to your opinion. And no, I do not think (or at least I hope) that this will not blow up into something bigger.

Ok, let me put you at ease... I don't want anyone fired. I would like them to take a different approach from now on though... one where the default is not killing babies, and that the exception is for hunting wyrmlings and firesnakesBut when one starts questioning the moral fiber of people these days in our media, crap happens. That might not be your intent, but the two of you are approaching this as a "should publishers be publishing this type of thing?" as if it is morally wrong and not just subpar monster design. Sorry, it's not morally wrong to many people. Morality is subjective. This is fiction. It's hard to really say that fiction is morally wrong because by definition, it's not real world.
being called a rabble rouser and a trouble maker and being told my thoughts should not be as represented (aka whole idea die a quick death) is insultingYou considered it an insult that I disagreed with you and thought that the thread should just die a quick death?
the author writes a character and you get to interpret that character. Is Fred a hero, a villain or other? Now in D&D instead of writing a character you are playing a roll and living through it your fantasy, and all I want is the default fantasy the game presents to new players NOT to be a baby killerThe author controls that character, just like the co-authors (i.e. D&D players) control their PCs.
Nothing forces you to have your heroic PC go fight a Firesnake.
OK, and I will ask for the 5th time, what would be the harm of taking baby monsters out of the default game?