Cool. See? I understand what you're saying.
I find this hyperbolic though. You (I'm starting to dig this italics thing...) are perceiving the DM's reaction as treating your request as suspicious or dangerous; that doesn't mean that's what's happening. Our life experiences colour our perceptions of the world. Is it possible yours see enemy combatants around every corner? The vast majority of people in this world are reasonable. Sometimes you have to peel a few layers off the onion before you spot it, but it's there.
People have repeatedly done that, in this very thread. I'm not speaking hyperbolically if I'm
literally describing what people are doing, in this thread.
Cool.
You sure about that? I haven't seen it. That might be your personal lens distorting what's happening here. If you do have a legitimate example of that that I've missed, please point it out.
Well, let's see...
Players who don't like it should either learn to live with it or find another DM.
This one's from page 1, so not exactly starting off on a high note. But wait, there's more!
I assume you could find a cool concept that does fit the DM's world, why not do that?
This, at least, tries to soft-sell it. But it's still, "You don't get to pick anything. Do what the DM tells you, or don't play."
wow, given that i had interpreted the original comment i responded to as to mean 'nobody would ever object to curation of a game world' imagine my surprise when i come back to find a response that says 'GMs only curate to keep things they personally hate/think are stupid out of the game, I should be allowed to play whatever i want because my preferences as a player are more important than the GMs'
Any objection whatsoever is, of course, instantly you being a problem, and can't possibly be a request for discussion! You
obviously have to be a nasty, petulant, demanding jerk.
Ultimately setting creation is an artistic endeavour. And I don't think an artist should compromise on their vision.
Read: DMs never need to compromise. Only players do.
If you really want some feature from a different race, we'll talk and figure out if there's something I can do to make it work. But the result has to look and, for all practical purposes, be one of the existing races. So yes, I've had Devas and Aasimaar in my game because they are just humans with unique features and backstories. But no, I will never have a Tabaxi even if I played one in someone else's campaign.
"You can have what you want, it just can't actually look or behave any different from not getting any of what you want."
That's at least three people explicitly saying you don't get to have anything you want (well, one of them saying you can, as long as it has zero impact and isn't physically/mechanically distinguishable from
not getting what you want in any way.) And at least two others strongly implying it.