Cap'n Kobold
Hero
Think triage principles. When you have an serious set of issues, you don't hold off doing anything until you are sure that it can be done perfectly. You fix the most critical, glaring problems immediately, and then worry about the lesser ones.So orcs would still be a usually evil and violent race of creatures, but they would just be described differently so that it doesn't mimic descriptions that have been used to demonize real world groups of people? I mean, that would be great, but I would be surprised if that were possible. It's just that I would be surprised that there are any words to describe that kind of fantasy race that real world racists have not used.
There are two ways of doing this:Perhaps some examples of the "countless" descriptions that have been used? And I mean for a race of evil creatures that would make for a good guilt free opponent. Sure you can write about an admirable but misunderstood race, but that wouldn't fill the same role that orcs are expected to fill in default D&D.
And yes, I read Mecheon's post about examples of orcs that are not chaotic evil savage raiders, but they are not the problem. The problem is how to have fictional race that is useful for providing enemies to a group of heroic adventurers. Adventurers that don't want to debate philosophy, but just want to go out, defeat the bad guys, rescue the innocent, and win some treasure.
1: Have a race like the recent official iteration of Gnolls, where they are no longer really people, but instead actual fiends in human form, and not suitable as a player race.
2: Orcs can still be chaotic evil savage raiders, but make it about being a savage chaotic evil raider, and not about being an orc. It is not OK to kill orcs just because they are orcs, but its fine to kill chaotic evil savage raiders, whether they happen to be orcs or humans.
You might not be able to immediately see all the issues that need fixing, but you can at least try to fix those issues that have been pointed out to you.And a final note about the "it really doesn't matter whether or not you or I think there's a problem with any of this. Because we're not the ones being hurt by it" argument. So we can't decide what the problem is, but we can decide what the solution should be? And note that I am not saying there is NO problem, I am pointing out that the proposed solutions my be trying to fix the wrong thing.