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Violence and D&D: Is "Murderhobo" Essential to D&D?
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<blockquote data-quote="Jfdlsjfd" data-source="post: 8020111" data-attributes="member: 42856"><p>I don't think players who ask for "supernaturally evil" opponents instead of "human-like opponent" are asking that because they want to play a scene where they meet at the tavern and say "hey, it's saturday night, let's go the orcish village to kill most of them and eviscerate their elderlies and children". They are already no longer playing murderhobos and are facings opponents who have done something.</p><p></p><p>Your proposed solution (<em>if your violence is justified, then the issue goes away</em>) doesn't work if you're part of a society where violence is never justified. Hundreds of countries have moved past capital punishment, and some even have most of their police forces without lethal weapons. In these societies, violence is banned because the victim of violences are human. Violence against animal can be OK (you're not to torture your dog, but it would be OK to hunt a tiger if it was threatening people). Hence some players (of which I am) who prefer "intelligent tigers" as opponents rather human-like opponents for exercising violence to let steam off.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jfdlsjfd, post: 8020111, member: 42856"] I don't think players who ask for "supernaturally evil" opponents instead of "human-like opponent" are asking that because they want to play a scene where they meet at the tavern and say "hey, it's saturday night, let's go the orcish village to kill most of them and eviscerate their elderlies and children". They are already no longer playing murderhobos and are facings opponents who have done something. Your proposed solution ([I]if your violence is justified, then the issue goes away[/I]) doesn't work if you're part of a society where violence is never justified. Hundreds of countries have moved past capital punishment, and some even have most of their police forces without lethal weapons. In these societies, violence is banned because the victim of violences are human. Violence against animal can be OK (you're not to torture your dog, but it would be OK to hunt a tiger if it was threatening people). Hence some players (of which I am) who prefer "intelligent tigers" as opponents rather human-like opponents for exercising violence to let steam off. [/QUOTE]
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Violence and D&D: Is "Murderhobo" Essential to D&D?
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