It is legit an amazing series with some awesome lore.
The mythology and cosmology of the setting is one of my favorites.
I am not sure if this a sterling defense of the series ... or an implicit rebuke on my juvenile sense of humor.
WHY NOT BOTH?

It is legit an amazing series with some awesome lore.
The mythology and cosmology of the setting is one of my favorites.
I think a big part of it is Generation Gaps, first between Gygax and the Youth who started playing in the early 80's, and them between those aged youth and yourself.Serious question, as I've seen a ton of people online that play D&D make jokes about Gnomes or say how much they hate them. More than Kender, actually.
So . . . what is it about Gnomes that makes people hate them so much? Or such easy targets for jokes online?
I agree that seriously mocking a race and saying it shouldn't be in D&D is mean. And even if you are just joking, there are probably people that will take offense to it. (I know people before have complained about you joke-mocking elves and bards.)
Sorry to disappoint you, but I have never listened to any of Nickelback's songs. (I'm only 20 years old, so most of your pop culture song references are lost on me.)
Elf on the Shelf didn't exist in 1982, but Lord of the Rings did. Tolkien permanently made Elves cool.Yeah, garden gnomes being a source of D&D communities mocking gnomes kind of makes sense. But, also, why don't people mock Elves for the Elf on a Shelf? Pretty similar concepts, and gnomes are the only ones getting made fun of.
Okay. I can understand that. I still don't think it's the whole story, but it's probably part of it.Elf on the Shelf didn't exist in 1982, but Lord of the Rings did. Tolkien permanently made Elves cool.
I can get with that, yeah, but why didn't George MacDonald equally make gnomes permanently cool? The gnomes in Phantastes were awesome.Elf on the Shelf didn't exist in 1982, but Lord of the Rings did. Tolkien permanently made Elves cool.
Dungeon Meshi/Delicious in Dungeon!Really? Examples please. Of D&D style gnomes in pop culture that people have actually read or heard about.
Oh, goodness, no, the Lord of the Rings and the Hobbit were already cultural mainstays before then. The Lord of the Rings has sold 150 milliona copies, and 100 million of that was before the movies came put. Prior to the movies coming out, Lord of the Rings had more printings than any book except for the Bible. It was a huge hit in the 60's, and then stayed consistently popular through the 70's, and the 80's, and the 90's, without the movies at all. The movies surely didn't hurt their popularity, though.Okay. I can understand that. I still don't think it's the whole story, but it's probably part of it.
(Also, minor point, but didn't most people not know about the Lord of the Rings until the movies? At least in the USA?)
Why should I care about what a rando on the street thinks about elves? D&D is a really personal game, that means different things for different people. We keep trying to find "the real" answer to things... that doesn't exist. Some people need their game to resonate with pop culture, others don't.
Maybe so, but a company publishing a game can't afford to devote attention to every "personal" game. The product needs to resonate with pop culture.
I stepped away for a while, but I wanna come back for this exchange, 'cause it is... y'know... accurate enough?D&D today is big enough to have the power to influence (to an extend) pop culture. A lot of D&D races don't have resonance outside the game, but are really popular...