Dungeonosophy
Legend
So, I'm reading through the 5e PHB for the first time. I'm an art student, and I noticed that the tapestry on p73, in my view, doesn't aesthetically jive with the rest of the illustrations. It has a digital-looking "tapestry texture". The "uncanny valley." So I was like "bleh."
Then I noticed the runes. I can read Anglo-Saxon futhark, so I was like: huh, wow this could be cool after all. I wonder what cool D&D lore they snuck into the runic message?
And you know what? This is the message:
"This is Photoshop's version of lorem ipsum.
Proin gravida nibh vel velit auctor aliquet.
Aenean sollicitudin, lorem quis bibendum
auctor, nisi elit consequat ipsum, nec sagittis"
Which actually is, in fact, Photoshop's version of "lorem ipsum," See for example, the text at the bottom of this placehold webpage. "Lorem ipsum" is placeholder dummy text used by printers and publishers (in this case, Photoshop) to demonstrate the visual form of a document or a typeface without relying on meaningful content.
I guess it's supposed to be funny. But I see it as totally lame and stupent. I'm not criticizing the artist personally - I'm sure they're talented. I am criticizing the editor and art director (whoever that is). Because this tapestry is a missed opportunity, for two reasons:
1) There already exist several complete alphabets in D&D lore -- everything from the Gnomish runes from the BECMI Northern Reaches Gazetteer, to the Dethek runes of the Forgotten Realms, to the various scripts (Draconic, Elven) that were designed for 4E. Though Anglo-Saxon runes are cool in context, and have some peripheral connection with D&D (via the D&D Norse Pantheon), they aren't essentially D&D. To use real-world Anglo-Saxon runes instead of one of the in-universe D&D scripts, is just whimsical and shallow.
2) Some actually cool message could've been written in there. Such as the name of the characters, or some reference to the world in which that event took place--or better yet, make some obscure but meaningful D&D easter egg: "Here Rogahn the Fearless and Zelligar the Unknown fought the Hydra of Lake Windrush." (referring to B1 In Search of the Unknown, and the town of Threshold from the Red Box). Now that would be cool. Or if you wanted the message a joke, at least make it a meaningful D&D joke, like: "Never split the party."
But this is literally a "generic" meaningless message. Taking up page-space in the most-viewed D&D product of all time. What a wasted space. Shows a lack of judgement all around.
-Travis
Then I noticed the runes. I can read Anglo-Saxon futhark, so I was like: huh, wow this could be cool after all. I wonder what cool D&D lore they snuck into the runic message?
And you know what? This is the message:
"This is Photoshop's version of lorem ipsum.
Proin gravida nibh vel velit auctor aliquet.
Aenean sollicitudin, lorem quis bibendum
auctor, nisi elit consequat ipsum, nec sagittis"
Which actually is, in fact, Photoshop's version of "lorem ipsum," See for example, the text at the bottom of this placehold webpage. "Lorem ipsum" is placeholder dummy text used by printers and publishers (in this case, Photoshop) to demonstrate the visual form of a document or a typeface without relying on meaningful content.
I guess it's supposed to be funny. But I see it as totally lame and stupent. I'm not criticizing the artist personally - I'm sure they're talented. I am criticizing the editor and art director (whoever that is). Because this tapestry is a missed opportunity, for two reasons:
1) There already exist several complete alphabets in D&D lore -- everything from the Gnomish runes from the BECMI Northern Reaches Gazetteer, to the Dethek runes of the Forgotten Realms, to the various scripts (Draconic, Elven) that were designed for 4E. Though Anglo-Saxon runes are cool in context, and have some peripheral connection with D&D (via the D&D Norse Pantheon), they aren't essentially D&D. To use real-world Anglo-Saxon runes instead of one of the in-universe D&D scripts, is just whimsical and shallow.
2) Some actually cool message could've been written in there. Such as the name of the characters, or some reference to the world in which that event took place--or better yet, make some obscure but meaningful D&D easter egg: "Here Rogahn the Fearless and Zelligar the Unknown fought the Hydra of Lake Windrush." (referring to B1 In Search of the Unknown, and the town of Threshold from the Red Box). Now that would be cool. Or if you wanted the message a joke, at least make it a meaningful D&D joke, like: "Never split the party."
But this is literally a "generic" meaningless message. Taking up page-space in the most-viewed D&D product of all time. What a wasted space. Shows a lack of judgement all around.
-Travis