Kai Lord said:
And I'm not against any company taking a moral stand on issues that involve their products or licenses. Not that D&D as developed by WOTC is G-rated in everything it depicts, but good for them for at least having a line to cross. I would applaud them if they decided to enforce that others do the same in future, after all it is their legal right.
Yeah. Right.
Editors and marketers of WotC:
"Violence: We are so far past that line, it's unreal."
"Sadism and masochism: We can cross that line. (Heh. These role-players: they really like dishing out violence
and taking it.)"
"Torture: We can cross that line, too. (As long as the player characters are doing all the torturing to the villains, and not visa-versa.)"
"Necrophilia: We can cross that line, as long as we tuck it away deep in the rules. (That is, we won't get into the explicit details of necrophilia. But having sex with dead people
is a necessary component in the casting of some cool spells and the creation of some neat magic objects.)"
"Black magic and demonology: But, of course! (It's all make-believe, after all. No offense to you genuine witches and Satanists, out there. As for you fundamentalist Christians: Who in the RPG industry still cares about you, nowadays?)"
"Pictures of scantily-clad or outright naked babes in the rulebooks: You betcha! It helps sell the products."
"Overt, obvious eroticism: No way! (We have to draw a line somewhere!)"
Feh. We Americans are so uptight and double-standard when it comes to sexuality. It sometimes makes me wish I lived in, er, France. (No, just kidding!)
