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Reading Ravenloft the setting
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<blockquote data-quote="LuisCarlos17f" data-source="post: 8231424" data-attributes="member: 6802378"><p>I see some supernatural power torturing those wicked souls, but there is not justice here, the goal is not to protect the innocents and people with good heart, but it is more like to push them more toward the "Dark Side of the Force". The tragicomic part is they may find help if they ask it, but they are too proud, toxic and selfish to pray. They are doomed because the do the least effort to save their souls. In the old horror movies the sinner is punished and the monster is destroyed by the brave men with a just heart who thank God for the victory against the darkness.</p><p></p><p>The fiction from past decades and centuries have got some tropes today aren't wellcome, even the titles written by and for women, but we can't blame them because their societies are different. How many female antagonists from previous XX-century literature aren't linked with males (husbands, lovers or family)?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="LuisCarlos17f, post: 8231424, member: 6802378"] I see some supernatural power torturing those wicked souls, but there is not justice here, the goal is not to protect the innocents and people with good heart, but it is more like to push them more toward the "Dark Side of the Force". The tragicomic part is they may find help if they ask it, but they are too proud, toxic and selfish to pray. They are doomed because the do the least effort to save their souls. In the old horror movies the sinner is punished and the monster is destroyed by the brave men with a just heart who thank God for the victory against the darkness. The fiction from past decades and centuries have got some tropes today aren't wellcome, even the titles written by and for women, but we can't blame them because their societies are different. How many female antagonists from previous XX-century literature aren't linked with males (husbands, lovers or family)? [/QUOTE]
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Reading Ravenloft the setting
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