I never go into any subforums. I just see what bubbles up to the first few pages of Home.I just don't go in that sub-forum at all. That solution really worked for me, as opposed to when those threads were out in Gen Pop, and I occasionally stumbled into them.
Huh. I mostly either:I never go into any subforums. I just see what bubbles up to the first few pages of Home.
Mostly General and Geek Talk for me.Huh. I mostly either:
A) Go by my Alerts to pop back in on ongoing discussions.
B) Go to the General Tabletop Discussions link above, then down into one of the sub-forums which regularly has content I'm interested in. D&D Older Editions, D&D, TTRPGs General, Geek Talk, mostly. Rarely into others.
Anyone of you one of the 7?
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On the one hand, I don't wildly disagree, at least that people shouldn't be shocked and/or outraged when a business entity turns out to care only (or at least primarily) about money. On the other hand, it can be ... disappointing, when someone/s that you thought weren't going to go that route, go that route. On the other other hand, there's also something to be said about businesses ceasing to plan further ahead than the next quarterly report, and how that has warped how businesses are run. Neither of those other hand things, though, mean that businesses don't--or shouldn't--care about money/profitability.Every now and then, I'll read someone's rant about how a business or corporate entity "only cares about money now," and I have to fight the urge to post a sarcastic Nicholas Cage gif, or that condescending Willy Wonka meme again.
Come on, people... "businesses only care about money" hasn't been a 'hot take' for hundreds of years. We know. That's why we invented businesses in the first place.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.