Do the math.
Lets say I was because 1) I was and 2) I would have to have been off by many orders of magnitude, otherwise.
Exactly. Folks appeal to popularity when advocating for one opinion or version or way of playing the game, but they forget that, were appeals to popularity not a fallacy, they'd be proof that D&D is crap, because so few people, relative to how many people there are, actually play it.
So random-in-order, all the way? Fair 'nuff. People, can't choose their race, assigned sex, nor the circumstances of their birth, either.
Noble background? Random.
I easily understood that he was referring to the general population. I didn't even have to sit down and figure out the math. 0.001% couldn't possibly be out of the total number of D&D players..It was in no way clear. I was referring to a subset of D&D players, you would clearly have to be referring to the total number of D&D players.
It wasn't unclear and was a very funny joke. That's why I gave him a laugh.Now you claim otherwise. Fine, you were in a hurry to be condescending and made an unclear statement.
Let's say you were in fact referring to the total population of America.
Well, the population of D&D players in America is drawn from the general population, so there's some relevance right there.How is that relevant to anything we have been discussing?
I easily understood that he was referring to the general population. I didn't even have to sit down and figure out the math. 0.001% couldn't possibly be out of the total number of D&D players..
Well, the population of D&D players in America is drawn from the general population, so there's some relevance right there.
Stopped clocks an' all... ;PI'm not surprised. Poor logic is a special skill of yours.![]()
Exactly how I ran my AD&D campaign c1985.I've played in games where birth circumstances, backgrounds and race were all randomly rolled. I had lots of fun. Sex would be the only one of that group that I haven't randomized.
Much smaller, no skull, fewer rocks.So you're saying your lawn looks something like this?
Seriously, though, it was painfully obvious.
We're all nerds here, we know what ~0.001% means. You can't possibly have entertained the thought that I was asserting hundreds of millions of D&Ders in America, alone.
Math is not a terribly ambiguous language.It really wasn't.
There was a misunderstanding, I hope it's been resolved.I told you exactly what I thought.
I am fine with that.I believe we are done here.
Maybe it was the era. We played that way from 1984 to about 1992 or so. Backgrounds were still random(Central Casting for the win), and stats were still random and in order, but we started picking our race.Exactly how I ran my AD&D campaign c1985.![]()