Got kicked out of a D&D group because I said the wage gap wasn't real, lol.
(media.communities.win)
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To be fair I had the wage gap argument with the DM's wife. The whole thing started because the DM thanked another player for introducing him to Christopher Titus, and posted a preview of his new special 'white suptemacy: a rebuttal". I said "modern woke comedy isn't comedy, it's just a sarcastic TED talk". He was all "maybe so, but FUCK WHITE SUPREMACISTS!" And then I said "#itsoktobewhite". It snowballed from there after his wife started on the conversation. Last thing he said before things escalated was "I just wanted us to all agree that white supremacy was bad..."
Keep in mind, this was all on a channel specifically called 'shitposting'. Looks like they couldn't handle actual shitposting.
no girls at the gaming table - the never care about the game, only about attention whoring for nerd thirst and also getting entertainment value from starting drama
You're being sarcastic, right?
Everyone is NOT in agreement about that, least of all leftists. The DM only said it because his religious conditioning demanded it of him. People who talk like that sound possessed.
Is Chris Titus cucked too?
I couldn't tell by skimming his Wikipedia page, which probably means yes.
I remember liking his sitcom, which Wiki tells me ran from 2000-02 for 54 episodes. Much longer than I would have guessed.
I can believe it. With people becoming more and more isolated, it has become difficult for some to naturally create a group to play with, let alone find someone with imagination to DM. I imagine these paid DMs treat it like commissioned storytelling.
It's been a thing online for a long time. The concept is that you're paying for someone who'll run "quality" sessions, know the rules, basically ensure you can just drop in and have fun with friends or other strangers without going to any lengths yourself aside from paying 'em.
These days you get a lot of insufferable people also looking for the "Critical Role" experience too.
Which is funny, because DMing "Critical Role" doesn't seem that hard to do. It's the logistics of organizing a group of 4-6 people in the modern world and have them stay on script that throws things into haywire.