Liste des Groupes | Revenir à csipg action |
On 11/15/2024 12:37 PM, Zaghadka wrote:I guess the concern is that players may become unable to differentiate the truth from the water elemental. I've noticed this in some Dungeon Masters who argue rules as if it were a physics laboratory. Not one hint of "this is fiction" or "we can't find a rule for that."Top post. First off, please knock it off with the non ANSI characters.I'm pretty sure it was an American phoneme.
>
I've never had so much trouble posting a reply.
>
On Fri, 15 Nov 2024 09:32:27 +0100, in comp.sys.ibm.pc.games.action,
Kyonshi wrote:
>On 11/15/2024 1:11 AM, Justisaur wrote:>On 11/14/2024 10:55 AM, Ross Ridge wrote:>Kyonshi <gmkeros@gmail.com> wrote:>At any rate, it is ironic see D&D go from Satanic Panic to being>
installed somewhere in the Vatican in just a few short decades. Never
let anyone tell you who you are.
I'm sure D&D was played in some form in the precincts of the Vatican
long before Baldur's Gate 3 was released. Maybe even during the time
when the Satanic Panic thing was raging in the US and to a lesser extent
the rest of the English speaking world, but not so much in Italy.
I don't know that it was Catholics going after D&D. BADD was
popularized by evangelicals - specifically the TV kind. Jack Chick was
was some very weird offshoot of Baptist.
>
And I think D&D was too niche back then to even touch some area like
that (which is after all just the size of a small town, even in the
middle of a metropolis), especially as a lot of inhabitants of the
Vatican city are elder professionals.
>
One would have to look up when DnD was released in Italian maybe.
All I know, and excuse me if I'm repeating this story for the 19th time,
is that my Irish Catholic grandmother bought me a first print 1e *Deities
& Demigods* for freaking Easter. I asked for it, and she was all "Yup."
So no, I don't think her priest was railing against Satan in D&D.
>
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.