Vaalingrade
Legend
I just want to stop a moment and preserve this.No, she did not, at least not the one true Lolth, that of Greyhawk.
As if being Lloth was something to be proud of.
I just want to stop a moment and preserve this.No, she did not, at least not the one true Lolth, that of Greyhawk.
Publish a cool and appealing Drow faction that is generally Good align, and it will make more difference.
Same for the Orcs, make up a faction of Orcs, that are smart, cunning, that use arcane in a different way and people will start to use them.
I just want to stop a moment and preserve this.
As if being Lloth was something to be proud of.
It's nothing about you. It's that Lloth is a joke based on canonical behavior and literally everything about drow society that has to do with her.I'm not sure what you are exactly trying to convey here,
I see no solution to satisfy those who don’t like that some use evil drows or orcs,I think you are getting it wrong here. Some people are already loving and using these two races. And the people who love them as they are would not love them anymore once transformed, because their badassness is also part of what makes them cool.
Actually, the thing is that, for some people, the fact that other people love them as they are IS the problem. They are assuming that they are loved for the wrong reasons - and they are wrong in all the cases that I know of personally - and that they are propagating wrong messages - in which they are wrong, again, for all the people that I know of at least, since we make absolutely no correlation between these races and the real world. Actually, one of my best friends and his daughter whom I lay with every week are people of colour and they absolutely love drows. The father, in particular, plays them every chance he gets, and evil when allowed to by the campaign.
The only solution is to show that there is absolutely no correlation between these races and the real world. And honestly, orcs in D&D have always been grey, grin or pink anyway. As for the drows, do you know anyone with absolutely black skin and the other features of a drow ? So it should be easy, except that some people have latched onto that and are using it as a lever to change other things in D&D, some of which need indeed to be portrayed more inclusively for example gender.
As an other solution, closer to what you suggest, maybe create a race that has dark skin but is good ? But I doubt that would work either.
It's nothing about you. It's that Lloth is a joke based on canonical behavior and literally everything about drow society that has to do with her.
So the idea of a multiverse of Lloths where one of them is trying to claim they're the Llothest Lloth is hilarious.
Thank to Lyxen, they're all the Citadel of Ricks in my head now, but Considering Bahamut and Tiamat are treated as gods in most settings, I think that's your answer.So, serious question. Would the gods in a multiverse kind of work like how they have it with the great wyrms (or whatever they're calling what Bahamut and Tiamat are now) that live across planes?
You understand that now I have to create a divinity "Citadel of Ricks" to interact/rule the multiverse, right?Thank to Lyxen, they're all the Citadel of Ricks in my head now, but Considering Bahamut and Tiamat are treated as gods in most settings, I think that's your answer.
My work here is done.You understand that now I have to create a divinity "Citadel of Ricks" to interact/rule the multiverse, right?
Love it!
This whole concept of "other Drow deities", at least of any relevance, makes no sense to me.Kinky.
Drow society would fall dangerously low, but I don't think it would collapse completely. Worship would shift immediately to other drow deities as the matrons won't want to lose their power and position. They'd ensure that the rest of the drow follow suit. That increased worship would strengthen Vhaeraun and the others.