I am the one fixating on quality on the thread which whole premise that people are arguing that the quality of halfling lore is objectively bad? Wow!
And these items have no lore, besides word 'elven' or 'dwarven' in the name. It is about as much lore than there being word 'Mordenkainen' in some spells. Yes, 'scarping the bottom of the barrel' was accurate.
But... that's not the premise of the thread.
No one is arguing that the lore that exists is objectively bad.
@Chaosmancer certainly isn't. He's arguing that it's
lacking but that's not the same thing as bad. It's not that halfing lore is bad. There's not enough of it to be good or bad.
Umm, no lore? What? Pull out your DMG. READ the section on Axe of the Dwarvish Lords and tell me there's no lore there. Heck, dwarves have a belt that turns everyone else into a dwarf. That's how cool it is to be a dwarf.
But, again, THAT'S NOT THE POINT. There IS lore for elves and dwarves all over D&D. That's undeniable. Whether we talk about the core books or expand it into settings. Elves and Dwarves both matter to the game. Now, the argument is that not mattering is a feature of halflings. Fair enough. Then why do they need to be in the PHB? Since they don't matter, they don't exactly need to eat up space in the PHB. Give them the one page in the Monster Manual and make room for stuff that might have a chance of actually helping people build settings.
This is the question that never seems to get answered. How long do we keep an option in the book that is, and always has been, one of the least popular options? What's a reasonable number here? Halflings have never been popular. At best, you might have one in a group (outside of some very strange outliers) and easily none in many groups. So, how long is reasonable? How long should the game cater to a tiny minority of players instead of much larger groups? I get that you really like halfings and that's fine. No problems. But, how long? Is 50 years long enough for a failed option? And, yes, it is a failed option since it never, ever gained any real traction among game tables.
Let's be honest here, if halflings WERE relegated to the Monster Manual, do you think it would have the slightest impact on the number of tables that see halflings played?