TeutonicBerserker
Explorer
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15% likely to make something up is not "largely liars," nor is a 20% chance to be or work with a thief an implication that they are "largely thieves." Hell, they aren't even 20% like to be a thief, only be OR work with one, which isn't unusual for a prostitute. For all you know it's 5% chance of being a thief and 95% not, but with a 15% chance to work with one. You're greatly overexaggerating the implications of that table.Two things. First, it WAS silly even at the time, and quickly realized as such almost immediately and thus removed later. Largely because while yes, one could encounter a sex worker in a city, it was unusually robust for an entry, and the implication that sex workers are largely liars and thieves is problematic.
In 2011? Neither did I. Turns out I'm both though!Ten years ago, I don't know that I would have known what an ace person was, or the term nonbinary. Times will continue to change.
Everybody has blinders on. We are all products of our limited experiences. There's nothing about cishet male that makes you in any way out of the ordinary in that regard. You could have left that part out and been just as accurate.I specifically said I knew many of the obvious ones, but as a cishet male, I have blinders on and want to know other things I may have missed. You know, the whole point of this thread.
Yes, but "European style" is just as much a pastiche, in D&D. Norman knights, and Hungarian boyars, and Spanish conquistadores, and Teutonic crusaders, and Polish hussars, and Pictish warriors, are all "European", yet nobody bats an eye when they get lumped together as "vanilla D&D" style.
Anyway, I'm completely on board with getting non-European cultures represented in gaming, but if "European" is good enough a category to lump everything together, so should "Asian" or "African" or "South-American".
I think that the origins of D&D from Midwest "White" America wargaming probably has some bearing on why D&D often presents European cultures and peoples as a pastiche. Similarly, the "nobody" who "bats an eye" are likewise most typically* North Americans. As to whether people truly "bat an eye" about these things, I like to point to the horned viking helmets that were once fairly common in D&D art and how those have increasingly vanished in D&D art concurrently with the dissemination of the debunking of this ahistorical depiction of the Norse. This sort of thing happens regularly in the hobby, but the process of challenging European pastiche in D&D is often met with far less resistance, so it transpires far more peacefully and without too much notice.As I said, I am FOR more representation of different cultures, but I fear that (as seen with OA in the past) there will be criticism of "pastiche", while disregarding the fact that ALL of D&D is pastiche.
(...) I like to point to the horned viking helmets that were once fairly common in D&D art and how those have increasingly vanished in D&D art concurrently with the dissemination of the debunking of this ahistorical depiction of the Norse.
And how many editions and decades ago were they introduced?Yeah, instead of helmets with horns, we now got funny looking humans with horns. [emoji19]
15% likely to make something up is not "largely liars," nor is a 20% chance to be or work with a thief an implication that they are "largely thieves." Hell, they aren't even 20% like to be a thief, only be OR work with one, which isn't unusual for a prostitute. For all you know it's 5% chance of being a thief and 95% not, but with a 15% chance to work with one. You're greatly overexaggerating the implications of that table.
These two statements are great examples of why this thread needs to exist in the first place. Being a cishet male is very much extra ordinary, because it means I haven't had to face a bucketload of issues or potential problematic challenges many others who aren't cishet males have to face. I.e., my blinders are significantly different than someone else's, and that difference is important. There is no even playing field here between all genders, ethnicities, and religions, especially when it comes to the context of how old school D&D was presented.Everybody has blinders on. We are all products of our limited experiences. There's nothing about cishet male that makes you in any way out of the ordinary in that regard. You could have left that part out and been just as accurate.
I belong to the one you mentioned. Here's the thing, though. 15% of everybody being liars is very low. The percentage is much higher than that. UMass researcher finds most people lie in everyday conversationTell any ethnic group or minority group that 15% are likely liars and 20% hang out with thieves and then tell me that they are greatly overreacting when they take offense to that.
No, it's really not, which is the issue people have with it. A straight white male has no more or less blinders on than a gay black male or a hispanic straight female. We just have different blinders. You aren't special in that regard.These two statements are great examples of why this thread needs to exist in the first place. Being a cishet male is very much extra ordinary, because it means I haven't had to face a bucketload of issues or potential problematic challenges many others who aren't cishet males have to face.
I didn't say we have the same blinders on.The implication that that someone who enjoys a ton of privilege by being in the largest group and the target demographic has the same blinders on as a minority because we're all the same is ludacris.
These two statements are great examples of why this thread needs to exist in the first place. Being a cishet male is very much extra ordinary, because it means I haven't had to face a bucketload of issues or potential problematic challenges many others who aren't cishet males have to face. I.e., my blinders are significantly different than someone else's, and that difference is important. There is no even playing field here between all genders, ethnicities, and religions, especially when it comes to the context of how old school D&D was presented.
The implication that that someone who enjoys a ton of privilege by being in the largest group and the target demographic has the same blinders on as a minority because we're all the same is ludacris.