As in being able to get out the front door of your house and go to school/work/the pub without having an existential breakdown brought on by unchecked skepticism, and being able to at least put on the act that everything and everybody you're interacting with is real and not some figment of imagination.How are you defining meaningful in this context?
Why would any of that be relevant on a forum about a fantasy role playing game? We are discussing things that do not, in fact, exist.As in being able to get out the front door of your house and go to school/work/the pub without having an existential breakdown brought on by unchecked skepticism, and being able to at least put on the act that everything and everybody you're interacting with is real and not some figment of imagination.
Warcraft is I think the biggest property to divert to beardless dwarf women, and a lot of properties have followed that pattern.
[Female dwarves] are more likely to keep their hair in tight buns, though a few dwarven women also grow neatly trimmed facial hair.
Thank you! I REMEMBER Ninjara well. But it was actually a reference to the current IDW TMNT comics where Raph has a thing for a former foot clan mutant fox ninja named Alopex.Props to you for the Ninjara reference.
Who are actually revealed to be three troll hating druids in the plot twist.Three Billy Goats Gruff to knock you of your bridge?
In a world where those myths are true, yes.How would you tell? You are basing your definition of species on myth?
Again, depends on the setting. Sometimes it’s a reliable indicator, sometimes it isn’t.Closer to the real world pre-DNA definition of species, but you go on to explain why that doesn't work in fantasyland.
Umm... You do realize the dwarves we’re talking about are fictional, right? No, you being short doesn’t make you a fairy tale creature, and the Mbuti tribe aren’t a different species.I'm shorter and stockier than the average human, does that make me a dwarf?[
Members of the Mbuti tribe have an average height of less than 4 foot 11', but are definitely human.