Thirteenspades
Great Wyrm
Oops. Quadrigot.Dear, Thor! Do I really have to post the same picture on the same page?
Since 1974. No Good and Evil here:
View attachment 124527
Oops. Quadrigot.Dear, Thor! Do I really have to post the same picture on the same page?
Since 1974. No Good and Evil here:
View attachment 124527
Did I say zombies were evil? (Also the last part of your post could be seen as offensive.)Bigot! Zombies were people too, you know!!!!!!!!!!
Zombie Lives Mattered
I mostly meant alignment in its current capacity. That page doesn't mention good or evil, only law and chaos.
Did I say zombies were evil? (Also the last part of your post could be seen as offensive.)
A necromancer who creates undead just to destroy settlements is evil, even without a marker saying they are.
All rules are theoretical. I don't see how that argument does anything to disprove mine.And when D&D was first made, rules were theoretical. Alignment and all. Both clearly defined and abstract.
Did I say zombies were evil? (Also the last part of your post could be seen as offensive.)
A necromancer who creates undead just to destroy settlements is evil, even without a marker saying they are.
Thanks for that. It was a very interesting read and filled a gap in my knowledge.That actually has been disproven, with the discovery of fossils in IIRC 2017 of horses from much later than that, as well as sightings of Natives with horse in the Carolinas in numbers before horses could possibly have gotten to there from escaped or lost Spanish horses, which would have had required the horses to escape or be lost, travel from what is now Mexico City, and repopulate, in 2 years or less.
In other words, the entire narrative that Europeans reintroduced natives to horses has always been bunk “science” based on Western biases.
Edit: a quick google helped me find a good article with links to sources. I’ll do the work for you this time, because I enjoy reading about it anyway.
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Yes world, there were horses in Native culture before the settlers came
Yvette Running Horse Collin’s recent dissertation may have rewritten every natural history book on the shelf. A Lakota/Nakota/Cheyenne scholar, Collin workedindiancountrytoday.com
And also because it pulls more from western fantasy than Christianity.2) D&D religion is pagan polytheism to avoid offending Christians.
A lot of stuff, TSR expected that the DM assumed. That's why it was so rules-light.All rules are theoretical. I don't see how that argument does anything to disprove mine.