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Violence and D&D: Is "Murderhobo" Essential to D&D?
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<blockquote data-quote="MGibster" data-source="post: 8021844" data-attributes="member: 4534"><p>I think the implication here is that the audience for Animal Crossing has wildly different expectations than the audience for Doom. If I sat down for a nice relaxing game of Animal Crossing I'd be rather disappointed if I had to generate resources by ripping demons apart. </p><p></p><p>And no matter how we're defining murderhobo, I'm still not clear on how everyone is using it, violence is a major component of D&D with the major abilities of each class revolving around breaking things and killing people. If I sit down to play some D&D I expect there to be a decent amount of combat because the game was built with that assumption. But if I sat down to play Trail of Cthulhu and it was combat heavy I'd be disappointed because that's not where the game shines. (Though there are more action-oriented adaptations of the Gumshoe system.) i.e. If I want to play a game with very little combat, more diplomacy, more peaceful resolutions then D&D is not my first choice.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MGibster, post: 8021844, member: 4534"] I think the implication here is that the audience for Animal Crossing has wildly different expectations than the audience for Doom. If I sat down for a nice relaxing game of Animal Crossing I'd be rather disappointed if I had to generate resources by ripping demons apart. And no matter how we're defining murderhobo, I'm still not clear on how everyone is using it, violence is a major component of D&D with the major abilities of each class revolving around breaking things and killing people. If I sit down to play some D&D I expect there to be a decent amount of combat because the game was built with that assumption. But if I sat down to play Trail of Cthulhu and it was combat heavy I'd be disappointed because that's not where the game shines. (Though there are more action-oriented adaptations of the Gumshoe system.) i.e. If I want to play a game with very little combat, more diplomacy, more peaceful resolutions then D&D is not my first choice. [/QUOTE]
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Violence and D&D: Is "Murderhobo" Essential to D&D?
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