Thomas Shey
Legend
Also, I will say there are some communities that are based in toxic behavior.
Its really difficult to argue that parts of computer game fandom don't land in this.
Also, I will say there are some communities that are based in toxic behavior.
Its really difficult to argue that parts of computer game fandom don't land in this.
It's not that I haven't seen Spelljammer before. The reaction I described upthread for the 5E Spelljammer stuff is still the same reaction I had to it 25 years ago. Two and a half decades later and I'm still trying to figure out what this has to do with dragons, knights, and castles. I can see it working perfectly in a Star Frontiers reboot, or a sci-fi RPG like Esper Genesis, but it's too jarring in my mind for D&D.I am always surprised when people do this type of reaction when D&D brings out an existing old setting. Like, google/wikipedia exists, surely anyone who saw the announcement looked into it, or maybe notice that WotC said they are bringing Spelljammer BACK, IE it existed before?
If this setting confuses you, I wonder what you will say about the giant ring shaped city in the middle of the multiverse, ruled by an enigmatic goddess in an iron mask whose shadow can cut you to ribbons, and maintained by floating humanoids who talk by conjuring up pictures in speech bubbles above their heads, and where people join various sects that have such strong belief in various ideals that they can literally shape that belief and gain powers from it.![]()
Online multiplayer competitive games are the worst.
Especially shooters. I'm too old to really enjoy pure reflex based games any more at least at a competitive level, but their communities are just embarrassing. And the thing is, the community knows that they are embarrassing there is just nothing that can be done about it. There is an entire group of streamers who make a living embarrassing the most toxic members of the community for the entertainment of their victims.
But really, I've seen this at ping pong tables. I remember this time some girls wanted to play ping pong together and there was this guy who was like, "I was here first, winner gets to keep the table", and he was clearly relishing destroying the young women in ping pong. And so then a more serious ping pong player had to come along and wipe the floor with him, to the applause of some in the room, so that the two novice girls could get a table. And that was like before the internet was a public thing. So there is nothing new under the sun.
It's not that I haven't seen Spelljammer before. The reaction I described upthread for the 5E Spelljammer stuff is still the same reaction I had to it 25 years ago. Two and a half decades later and I'm still trying to figure out what this has to do with dragons, knights, and castles. I can see it working perfectly in a Star Frontiers reboot, or a sci-fi RPG like Esper Genesis, but it's too jarring in my mind for D&D.
This is entirely my problem. A lot of people are enjoying the wave of nostalgia for it, and only a jerk would want to spoil that for them. It's just not for me, and that's okay.
See also: Planescape
Sure, but there's an ability for the Net to concentrate these attitudes all in one place that wasn't nearly as easy prior to it.
Maybe. I wonder how much of that is "You Kids Get Off My Lawn!", but to the extent that I agree with the sentiment I think that I'd put it silently differently.
The internet makes it a lot easier to hear about it. I've known conceptually that people have wanted to kill me since I was a kid. However, the internet makes it a lot easier to actually encounter those people because it just makes it a lot easier to encounter a lot of people. And because the cases when I receive death threats tend to stand out, I could draw the inference more people want to kill me now than ever before. But I don't think hate is becoming more common because of the internet necessarily, it's just that now I can interact with thousands or millions of people instead of dozens or hundreds. To the point that I feel, if you haven't had multiple people express desire for your death online, have you really even been interacting with people online? Or did you just stay in your own quiet village or not scroll down below the fold?
That seriously just was a sea change.
His language was dismissive. He basically said "your feelings don't count because they're not the same as mine."Really? Did he really? Was his language really so strong? You literally as a grown person in the Year of Our Lord 2022 are really hurt and offended by "Not for some "oh someone hurt my fee-fees" nonsense." Is that heresy in your quasi-religious fandom that you had to cover your ears or your mouth in shock? Does someone need smiting now?