Avatar

in the wrong time

@perpetuallypossessingpasta / perpetuallypossessingpasta.tumblr.com

A tumblr of nostalgia and nerddom
Avatar
Avatar
rpgtoons

I just got my physical copy of this wonderful tome by Arcanist Press! It has a great introduction that explains why the use of the term “Race” in our beloved role-playing games is so problematic, and then offers a great solution for it that fits right in-between existing 5e rules.

We’ve been looking for a good alternative to “Race” for the character options we publish on our patreon, and we’re now going to do some tests to see if this model is something we could use.

I highly recommend you check it out! The free preview on DiveThruRPG includes the introduction & full rules for alternate character creation.

Find it here 👉 Ancestry & Culture

Avatar
explolalola

I don’t understand why “race” is somehow a bad thing in D&D?

Some people have responded to this idea with some confusion, so I’ll try to explain it as best I can.

Why “Race”, as used in Role-Playing Games, is bad.

Most role-playing games explicitly combine a person’s physical traits with their morality into one package at character creation, usually presented as “Race”. By doing this, these games (often unwittingly) support the idea that a person’s genetics decide a person’s morality and worth.

This is a bad thing because there are people who play these games – black people, disabled people, women, just to name a few – who have been told their entire lives they are lesser than others because of the way they were born; because of the way they look. For them, this kind of bigotry is a painful, every day reality. No-one should have to experience that in a game.

This is also why just renaming “Race” as it is presented in role-playing games to something like “Species” doesn’t help as much as you’d think. It doesn’t address the problem at it’s root – the false idea that a person’s genetics determines their worth (or: their traits).

Why I think “Ancestry” and “Culture” is a good alternative.

By splitting Ancestry – the physical traits inherited from one’s parents, and Culture – the traits taught to you by your parents & community, the game mechanics no longer explicitly imply a person’s genetics (or: appearance) determine their morality and perceived worth. In this updated system, Bad Tieflings can still exist. Evil dark elves can still exist. Bigoted people who believe all Tieflings and all Dark Elves are evil can still exist.

But those things are no longer assumed to be true at character creation.

Why I’m excited to start using the Ancestry & Culture method.

The world all of our games take place in, Hemelin, has various diverse cultures dotted around the place. I have often struggled to express this well using the existing mould of “Race”, but before I discovered the “Ancestry & Culture” method, I didn’t understand what was causing this struggle.

I find that using separate Ancestries and Cultures provides much more robust framework for us to design player options for our world with. I’m excited at the prospect of being able to present various cultures that players can identify with without needing to also be of a certain ancestry! I’m excited to empower our players to create more diverse characters that reflect our game world!!

A final note.

The book “Ancestry & Culture, an alternative to Race in 5e” explains all of these concepts way better than I can. I urge you to read it, even if it’s just the free preview.

You can find it here

Avatar
Avatar
bnmxfld
I swear I only want to hear about you, to know what you’ve been doing. It’s a hundred years since we’ve met- it may be another hundred years before we meet again.

Edith Wharton / The Age of Innocence (via bnmxfld)

Avatar

Jean Seberg - Vogue US (1990) Christy Turlington by Ellen von Unwerth

Avatar

I don’t know who still follows me, but I’ve gotten my little butt back on Tumblr because of my thesis class. It’s all about analyzing/criticizing the western literary canon (“good” book versus “popular” book) and we are reading TWILIGHT. Ya’ll it’s bonkers, I am reading Stephenie Meyer in a college class. Wild times. 

Avatar
Avatar
dedhood

ruth bader ginsburg lived 87 fucking long years, helped secure abortion rights, marriage equality, and immigration rights among loads of other things.

remember her legacy as both a supreme court justice, as an advocate and icon in equality movements, and as the woman who wouldn’t take no shit from donald trump, sticking through multiple battles with cancer to preserve our rights.

rest in peace. honor her legacy.

Avatar

Things I regularly get mixed up:

- Henry James and James Joyce. Which one wrote the dirty letters to his wife, Nora?

- No Country For Old Men and There Will Be Blood.

- David Lynch and David Fincher and sometimes, Aaron Sorkin.

You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.