arnwyn said:
Nudity in an RPG book adds "complexity"? Needless to say, I have no idea what you're talking about.
Speaking in an abstract way, a world where feature X exists is more complex than a world where feature X does not exist. This added complexity may or may not be desirable, of course. I never said they were
strong reasons.
In fact, I fully expected you not to find these reasons compelling. I'm not here to convince you to add nudity to your games.

I'm just trying to make you understand that it is conceivable that other people may find nudity interesting or useful (without being perverts).
(Though I can certainly understand the "realism" part when it's a setting on - as the previous example given earlier above - ancient Greece, and, uh... that's about it.)
Hm... maybe we're talking about two different things. I am not talking about making nudity central to the game, and I don't know why you would get this impression; I am talking about recognizing that it exists. Naked people have always existed, and until we find a way to upload brains into robots, they will keep existing.
It sure as hell better be when it's in an RPG book. I, for one, certainly don't buy an RPG book for "art" (I buy... wait for it... an art book for art. Go figure!).
Again, I suspect that we're on different wavelengths. I wasn't talking about illustrations (only). When I said art, I meant
all art, including literature and certain aspects of RPGs. Basically, what I mean is that if I want to publish something,
anything, including a RPG supplement, the fact that I have or have not a reason to do it is completely irrelevant to the artistic value of the work.
In other words: you've asked why, and I've given you three possible reasons (which probably aren't valid for you, but they are valid for someone). Now forget about that, and suppose there are no reasons. The answer to your "why?" is "because I can", and the answer to "why would I want it?" is "that's a marketing problem, not an artistic one".
