Wizards Of The Coast Is Making Major Changes

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member

DnD Creator Gary Gygax A "Open White Supremacist" Even In Death There Is No Escape From The Left​









I saw this dumbass on Twitter Yesterday .. he was torn apart in the responses .....

typical leftist COMPLETELY mi-interprets the posts made by GG way back when

Gygax was NEVER on an FBI watch list for White Supremacists
 

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member
In Fantasy reality why would someone choose to remain disable ....

[but muh representation - I have to be ' represented ' to be immersed in the game] said No NORMAL Person Ever


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You should 100% do better and grow up while learning to be more tolerant and open minded.

Because the reality isn't that people are laughing at dissabilities.

They are disagreeing with you over a fictional video game, and you're lashing out at the internet with the only small extent of power you have which is to ban people who disagree with you.

This is not how you convince people, this is how you just get. As to your point.

There is a difference between suspending disbelief and flat out absurdity. A fantasy creature a monster or a fae is suspension of disbelief.

A fish on a unicycle fighting a dragon is absurd.

So is a barbarian in a wheel chair fighting a cyclops.

It's fine if you don't agree with this view, but simply banning people over it is why you need more laugh emojis.










Why D&D's Combat Wheelchair Is A Good Start For Disabled Representation


Back in 2020, game designer and disability advocate Sara Thompson published a home-brew set of rules introducing the concept of the "Combat Wheelchair" to Dungeons & Dragons 5th edition – a reinforced, light-weight wheelchair with mild magical qualities designed to empower disabled heroes to go on wild adventures alongside their companions. This free-to-download supplement, with intricate rules taking into account both magic items and "ramming attacks," has inspired others to come up with similar equipment for other tabletop RPGs, while also challenging the industry as a whole to take a hard look at how they represent – or fail to represent – disabled people in their fictional worlds.

When Sara Thompson designed her Combat Wheelchair – a rugged, splay-wheeled chair with multiple accessories of both mundane and magical persuasion for an enterprising adventurer's needs, she drew inspiration from her own experience using a wheelchair and from the rough and rowdy sports of wheelchair rugby and wheelchair basketball. With the rules and features Sara drew up for D&D 5e (and for the pen-and-paper RPG adaptation of The Witcher), a player character with physical impairments can use the Combat Wheelchair and its "gadgets" to perform sick stunts, ram enemies, and magically "hover up stairs."












Wheelchair Accessible Dungeon... A Rant about the response to Candlekeep Mysteries



 
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Clem72

Well-Known Member
It's not like there isn't a place for a wheelchair bound character. Is Charles Xavier an X-man, does he ever fight the bad guys? Yes, but he isn't a melee character. If your wheelchair guy is a magician or mentalist or something I might buy it, but your wheelchair dude doesn't fight with a mace, that's silly. At most I will accept him flinging his colostomy bag around like a kusarigama (chain sickle).
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