I agree to some extent. The lore and what WOTC changes can affect what you do around the table. You are better staying away from drow entirely then have a moral discussion about being an evil race. It ruins the entire mood.
Bandits and mindless undead. This is about it. The fact that you had a good Mind Flayer in BG3 was the worse part of that game.
For some reason that annoyed me more then shadowheart being a tranny and the forced diversity in skin color. That place in the middle of nowhere is more diverse then modern day London.
"There is no moral discussion to be had. There is an elemental plane of fire, water, air, and earth, and in the same measure, you can see the map, there is a plane of Good and of Evil, and being there causes you atmospheric effects just like the others. Good and Evil are elements. Some humanoids have minimal fire and lots of water in them. Drow have some Evil in them. Do not campaign for a fire elemental to be more watery."
I agree to some extent. The lore and what WOTC changes can affect what you do around the table. You are better staying away from drow entirely then have a moral discussion about being an evil race. It ruins the entire mood.
The thing is, when are they going to stop? When there's no antagonists beyond mindless slime monsters? I mean, dragons are people, too.
Bandits and mindless undead. This is about it. The fact that you had a good Mind Flayer in BG3 was the worse part of that game.
For some reason that annoyed me more then shadowheart being a tranny and the forced diversity in skin color. That place in the middle of nowhere is more diverse then modern day London.
"There is no moral discussion to be had. There is an elemental plane of fire, water, air, and earth, and in the same measure, you can see the map, there is a plane of Good and of Evil, and being there causes you atmospheric effects just like the others. Good and Evil are elements. Some humanoids have minimal fire and lots of water in them. Drow have some Evil in them. Do not campaign for a fire elemental to be more watery."