Whizbang Dustyboots
Gnometown Hero
"WotC is giving DMs too much freedom."

it's weird to me that Texas Instruments make calculators and not guns.
First of all, I take exception at the phrase "weaponized" -- I assure you, I really am that terrible at communicating when it's not over a GM screen at a game session.There are more than a couple posters who I believe have effectively weaponized bad communication as a form of rhetoric. For better or worse, these people can sometimes hide for years behind ENWorld's civility policies.
First of all, I take exception at the phrase "weaponized" -- I assure you, I really am that terrible at communicating when it's not over a GM screen at a game session.
Second, I have hidden for decades behind ENWorld's civility policies, with only the occasional warning, so I'm counting it as a win...
First of all, I take exception at the phrase "weaponized" -- I assure you, I really am that terrible at communicating when it's not over a GM screen at a game session.
Second, I have hidden for decades behind ENWorld's civility policies, with only the occasional warning, so I'm counting it as a win...
As someone who has worked in Silicon Valley for a decade, it befuddled me that ao many people are eager to have some Tech Bros blow smoke right up their tailpipe about their latest scam.
The notion of reviving victims of drowning accidents with tobacco smoke enemas seems, to say the least, a little odd. But to 18th-century physicians, this approach was entirely rational. The mainstay of treating the “apparently dead” was warmth and stimulation. Rubbing the skin was one method of stimulation, but injecting tobacco smoke into the rectum was generally thought more powerful. Since its introduction from the New World by Sir Walter Raleigh (1552–1618), tobacco has had a place in the pharmacopoeia for its warming and stimulating properties. It was useful in counteracting cold and lethargy, either in an individual's constitution, or brought on by particular afflictions.