I'm sure WOTC has the data.
I mean we D&D fans have to be consistent. We can't say "WOTCC didn't add or change X because they have the data and the data states pro-change isn't the majority." AND "WOTC is changing Y but they don't have the data that Y needs changing nor that pro-change is popular."
I am not sure at all that WOTC has the data. We know how they gather data, it's been used consistently for 7 years now, and they didn't use that method to gather the data. There has been no survey, no hint of those questions, in any of their solicitations of feedback from the consumer base. There hasn't been a beta playtest set of questions about it either. There hasn't even been a casual poll through D&D Beyond, or even comments section on a video.
So yes, I am being consistent. Past major changes to the game always went through a process which this one didn't go through. The consumer base has had no opportunity for input on this one, while there was an opportunity for input on all prior major changes like this. In fact there's been input on much smaller changes than this one in addition to larger changes. This one stands alone in terms of major changes which did not receive a single survey question from the consumer base.
Anecdotally, I've seen many times in real life and heard many stories of on the net of people using alignment poorly.
That stuff was just the last straw.
Lawful Stupid Paladins, Flipfloping Druids, Destructive Chaotic Murderhobos, DMs stripping divine powers off of strict readings, Lolth Drow being a nonsense civilization, and CE savages being musclebound yet nothaving basic agriculture needed to fuel their raids have been examples of poor usage of alignment for decades.
All of that is just personal conjecture and anecdotal notes. None of that is real, organized data from WOTC.
It's an easy problem to prove.
Alignment is a tool with a poor instruction manual and many end up using it wrong and upsetting themselves.
Solution: Teach DMs and Players how to rassing frassing use alignment, when to use it, and when to use deeper descriptions.
That does not prove there is a prove, it simply proposes a solution to a problem which hasn't been shown to exist.
Why are D&D fans so anti-teaching?
I'm not. I am against major changes to the game without there being a proven problem that needs to be taught.
Oh and the problem with Orcs isn't the real world implications.
Says you. A lot of people disagree with you on that.
The problem is that you are telling my that a race of humanoids 125-200% the mass of humans can go around raiding constantly for wealth and food and not starve due to their lack of farms and not be genocided by a focused effort by noblemen to wipe them out.
Warhammer Orks sprout from the bloodied ground. Warcraft and M&M Orcs build cities. All three of them farm.
D&D Orcs are so Chaotic and so Evil that their nation shouldn't even be able to function.
At least Demons have the energy go back to the Abyss to regenerate.
None of that is a common complaint about orcs. In fact it's one of the very rare times those issues have ever been raised on this message board.
And let's not get into the "Everybody was Backstabbing Everybody Else" Drow who somehow produce enough drow after assassinations and betrayals to manage several slave empires underground.
Again, this is a nearly unique complaint you have about drow, and I am failing to see how it relates well to this discussion about alignment.