D&D General Which D&D Words and Things are Post 1608?


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Infravision
I think their point is, Predetetor is science fiction, but infravision is a very real ability possessed by many real world animals. Ultravision too. Bees use it, and many "white" flowers have colours invisible the to humans.

The idea of a "visible spectrum" is human-centric. It's defined by the wavelengths humans can see. There is no reason to suppose anything that isn't human would see the same wavelengths.
 


Azzy

ᚳᚣᚾᛖᚹᚢᛚᚠ
I think their point is, Predetetor is science fiction, but infravision is a very real ability possessed by many real world animals. Ultravision too. Bees use it, and many "white" flowers have colours invisible the to humans.

The idea of a "visible spectrum" is human-centric. It's defined by the wavelengths humans can see. There is no reason to suppose anything that isn't human would see the same wavelengths.
And it still is a lot less fantasy and more scientific than "sees in dark".
 






Hussar

Legend
Funnily enough the word Ranger as associated with being mounted is very close:

ranger (n.)​

late 14c. (early 14c. in surnames), "gamekeeper, sworn officer of a forest whose work is to walk through it and protect it," agent noun from range (v.). Attested from 1590s in the general sense of "a rover, a wanderer;" from 1660s in the sense of "man (often mounted) who polices an area." The elite U.S. combat unit is so called from 1942 (organized 1941).
 

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