« first day (925 days earlier)      last day (4337 days later) » 

14:45
Are we going to end up with a mass of "What is the origin of [D&D Monster]?" questions?
@Aether those questions should be limited to iconic brand monsters, (beholders, chromatic dragons, etc). If someone asks "what is the origin of D&D orcs" that should get thrown out as "honey badger doesn't give a s**t"
(that's an inside joke, reference here: twitter.com/codinghorror/status/85134439906152448)
What constitutes "iconic brand monsters"?
@Aether Monsters that were made specifically for the game or monsters that were altered in a way to make them specific to D&D
If they were made specifically for the game - isn't that the origin?
I mean, there might be a bit more interest in the whole "this person made it up for this edition", but...
Lol good point, but then the question would be more about what inspired them
14:51
I find rpg.stackexchange.com/q/24682/1084 to be off topic/nc/tl/narq/uninteresting
I assume NARQ = Not a Real Question... What are NC and TL?
Oh, too localised...
dire is rather generic to....fantasy?
@Aether NC = not constructive
Ah, thanks.
Dire wolves were real but they went extinct
I think there may have been a few other "dire" creatures that also went extinct
@waxeagle I'm slightly interested in the origins of "dire", but I agree.
14:54
@Aether it's interesting say in a biology/etymology sense, but not in the RPG one
@waxeagle Right. Exactly.
We've had a few questions over the last week about the origins of various monsters, with varying levels of relevance.
considering the duration of presence this is probably iconic: rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/24615/…
Maybe we should have an Origin tag
@Aether that's an odd one I think. but it passes as it's invented for the game
15:01
I think given the presence and use of the [history-of-gaming] tag, that's on-topic?
@waxeagle I'm more ok with that, as it's along the lines of "I'm looking for lore on this, but have nothing before this - is there anywhere I can go to get more info?"
@Aether essentially, yes
With the implication that such information would be useful for his or others' campaigns.
but like: rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/21254/… isn't interesting for us
Yeah, much less so
15:49
Is a 21 AC overpowered for 1st level 3.5 paladin?
@Jonn_Underwood I don't think so. Sounds about right.
Paladins, Clerics and Fighters can easily start out with Full Plate (+8) and a Heavy Shield (+2). Given 12 Dex, that's AC 21.
Although... hmm... Full plate is 1500gp, so :/
How much gold does a Paladin start with?
@Aether $12.87?
16:15
@waxeagle: That buys you like 1/5oz of gold, so less than 1gp.
@ObliviousSage not even, like 1/100th
@waxeagle: Isn't it something like $70 an ounce right now?
I don't actually pay any attention to the price of gold, except when it gives me an excuse to mock people that think we should go back to the gold standard.
It's about $50/g, about $1500/oz
/shrug
gram, ounce, same difference
16:58
Right now the 24karat gold is going for $1506.80 per ounce
Which translates to $24,108.80 per pound
Which make a D&D gold piece worth in USD $482.17
Thats of coarse if the gold piece is made of the finest gold
You're forgetting the inflation of adventurers.
Compare the price of a gallon of milk in our day and a gallon of milk in most D&D settions.
I wonder why there aren't aluminum pieces...
Lol
Or tin pieces
Or iron pieces. Iron is valuable.
Or uranium pieces
17:05
Maybe there were. Maybe we have explained how magic came to be. ;)
Well, Aluminum used to be really valuable, though
I'm starting a new campaign about a gnome who believes the world would be better if automatons ruled everything
@Jonn_Underwood ooh, cybermen!
Lol sort of
The pilot session is tommorow
And I have nothing made yet
17:09
How long do campaigns in your group last?
Usually not very long
I wonder how common that is?
@Jonn_Underwood the first david tenant special is actually potentially right up your alley
But this time I'm gonna try a full bottom to top 1-20 game
Yeah I wonder how common that is too because I feel like I've failed when I dont get to level 20 with my group
In our group, the good times are when only two of our ADD as hell DM's are running one campaign each
17:12
no, it's not that one...which one is it.
Usually, it's 3 or 4 of us, and one or two of us is running two campaigns at once
So I would not consider a single dm, single campaign a failure by any means
For us its me as DM and three of my little brothers as characters
17:13
Ah, for me it's a group of friends from my old highschool
How do I post an image?
Upload, I think?
No how do I post it here in chat?
Frozen mangoes are awesome
@Jonn_Underwood the upload button, or if it's already on the web just a link to the image on it's own line or as the sole text of a reply
@wax eagle how did you post that picture?
Oh cool
That's my drawing of a d4
17:17
@Jonn_Underwood amazon product link
there are a small number of websites that automatically one box, amazon is one, XKCD is another
Well I have some adventure building to do before tomorrow gets here so I'll be back in a bit.
18:12
With the close votes and downvote, I get the feeling my dire question (rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/24682/…) is borderline, if I take out the historical part and make it only about the in game significance of the term, will that be best?
@StuperUser I dunno, it's worth asking about on meta I think though
I don't think it's a good question because I don't find the "dire" prefix interesting in an RPG sense. Dire wolves were named in 1858, I think the predates RPGs by a decade or two...
damn SE is good at google. search "dire as a creature prefix" an the first hit is your question :)
@waxeagle Yeah, well in the bestiary and podcasts about DnD I come across the term a lot and I'm not sure if there's any significance past it being a common prefix.
Wow. That's quick indexing!
@StuperUser I'm just a guy though. Seems that Dire as a 3.5 template is a thing...maybe focusing on that would work?
and you've got it couched mechanically enough that it's probably fine. I'm just being....I dunno. I think I'm probably wrong on a couple of re-reads
A guy with 30k rep, so you know the community better than me. We'll see what answers we get with the meta. I think that my wording was so focussed on the history and it was prima facie an idle curiosity off-topic question.
@StuperUser That's where I'd go (and I'm not even to 20 yet :)). that 30 is network wide (though over half is here)
18:26
A wild meta question appeared: meta.rpg.stackexchange.com/questions/2864/…
@StuperUser ooh, ask the more general question "how do we deal with creature origins within a system"
or even more general - literature, historical, natural historical influences
@StuperUser yes. I'd encourage folks when you ask on meta, ask questions that will set a precedent using your question as an example.
it's super effective
hopefully
18:46
0
Q: How to deal with questions that relate to off-topic influences to on-topic principles?

StuperUserWith the close votes and downvote, I get the feeling my dire question is borderline, with some parts on topic and some off-topic. How do we deal with questions about the influences/sources that are off-topic (literature, historical, natural historical) but are the source of rules other aspects o...

@waxeagle any news on what's going on with brian? have we completely dropped the en guard game?
@DForck42 He's been around on the overnight shift lately, but still seems insanely busy. I don't think we've dropped it, but I'm guessing we don't hear for a few more weeks
@waxeagle ok
19:39
@StuperUser hopefully. If not the 'PP' doesn't ever run out here, no need for a stackacenter.
I'd write up an answer, but I've gotta head out here in a couple of minutes and won't be back til wednesday. Y'all have fun
20:12
@Jonn_Underwood Coins are never pure gold. Gold is soft and malleable, and a pure gold coin would be rubbed away in your pocket.
You always mix gold with something else if it's going to be used for anything except sitting on a shelf.
perl.com/pub/2000/12/advocacy.html excellent article on polarization, veiled psychology within programming language discourse
found it on the meta
"If you approach PHP with the idea that it has to be destroyed or shut out, that Perl is Right and Everything Else is Messed Up, you aren't going to find out what PHP's advantages are. You aren't going to be in a state of mind that can recognize that PHP has something good that Perl doesn't."
@Jonn_Underwood Cool.
"Any Other Problems?

I'm glad you asked. Us-versus-them is not a way to be an effective advocate. Says Nat: ``Passion doesn't convince. Passion makes you look like an idiot or an asshole.'' Telling someone that Perl is great and their thing sucks isn't going to persuade anyone of anything. This style of advocacy may be fun and easy, but it isn't effective. You have to lead people, not drive them before you.

Conclusion

I don't really hate advocacy. I just hate the way we do it most of the time. We do it in a dumb way. And I think the discoursive habits we pick up as a result are going to
20:35
@LitheOhm This is true of nearly any discourse or choice we engage in.
@BESW absolutely agreed. My research paper for English this term goes on a similar tangent relating it to something else.
We're taught that we need to take sides in every choice, every debate; and that each position is mutually exclusive of any other.
yeah. Competition instead of collaboration
We see it in RAW/RAI and edition wars all the time.
Yep
20:40
edition wars aye, not sure on the RAW/RAI. I haven't seen advocacy on either, I don't believe
@LitheOhm I have.
k
and @Phil you have also?
Early in my days on SE, I ran into someone who'd been so traumatized by an IRL group that felt RAW was an absolute truth, that he lashed out at an answer in which I simply said that understanding RAW is important in order to have context for RAI and houserules.
I will always remember it, because "shmoo" is the best insult I have ever been called.
Polarization is taken to such an extreme it's totally ridiculous, but it's pushed on us so universally that we don't even notice it anymore.
20:44
Yeah. Phrases such as "why can't we be friends" are viewed as so sentimental and sometimes even behind the times. False dichotomy and all that, it's been the norm for a while I imagine. Hence the desensitization
Mac or Windows, emo or hipster, Wordpress or Blogger, liberal or conservative? Brands of clothing, choices in music, everything is framed as a polarizing choice.
i'm not sure it's framed as a polarizing choice (well, politics maybe) but that the rise of the Internet makes it easy to associate primarily with people who agree with you, so you get the echo chamber effect going
Identification with the label contributes, I believe. The article from earlier put it that way and I'm inclined to agree
@ObliviousSage yeah, definitely. Even if it's not framed by the speaker then it's too easy for a listener to take it as framed
@ObliviousSage It's not the Internet's fault. If any single phenomenon can be blamed, it's consumerism.
I definitely see the echo chamber effect amplified by the internet
20:48
@LitheOhm Definitely, but... Calvin said it.
@BESW: I'm not sure I agree. Communications technology in general, and the Internet in particular, have increasingly made it easy to self-segregate. More and more people can, and do, surround themselves with people that are as much like them as possible, which makes it harder to see other points of view.
@ObliviousSage I strongly disagree. That's the tendency, but you're correlating tool with cause.
The Internet makes it just as easy--if not easier--to integrate.
I dig the Calvin/Hobbes cartoon
i don't see any link, correlational or causal, between consumerism and polarized politics
Communications technology puts you in touch with a vast array of people. The choice to remain with the like-minded is not a factor of the technology; it anything, it's a perversion of the technology.
20:50
It appears the majority would segregate. If that's the case then any tool would better serve polarization than integration
@BESW: it's a bug in human software, a cognitive bias
@ObliviousSage Consumerist economies are rooted in polarization, because otherwise your choice of product is not tied to your identity.
lol
Capitalism ties to polarization, especially after the marketing era. Label-making breeds itself
The cult of the individual (which is really the heart of the consumerist philosophy) feeds on us vs them mentalities.
Don't confuse capitalism with consumerism.
I'm volunteering capitalism as an entity with ties to polarization.
20:53
i still think political polarization in particular is much more strongly rooted in things that were done in the past 50-60 years rather than in consumerism
Even as my eco book touts capitalism above socialism it's difficult to shroud it's downfalls
@LitheOhm Oh, sure. I don't think any single entity or process is solely responsible.
in particular, a couple decades ago several groups deliberately tried to radicalize segments of the US population to increase voter turnout
I don't know enough about political polarization to say
@ObliviousSage how so?
@ObliviousSage It's a feedback loop; that strategy wouldn't have even been tried if there wasn't a strong sense that getting people to identity with a political party emotionally (through a sense of identity) instead of rationally (though a sense of justice) would work.
20:58
primarily on the conservative side, the Dominionists (the Christian equivalent of Muslims who think Shari'a law should be the basis of the government) have been striving to make evangelicals more radical (check out the documentary Jesus Camp) and more well-financed conservative elements deliberately created the echo chamber of conservative talk radio and eventually Fox News
bbl
Hey guys
@BESW: perhaps so, but that again has nothing to do with consumerism, it has to do with the fact that the system is set up in such a way that only a political party capable of attracting 40+% of the population can achieve any level of success
howdy jonn
@Jonn_Underwood hey Jonn
it's why some candidates receive no coverage at all
I'm very poorly versed in politics. It's simply the fact that it's always changing. What I learned about the recent presidential election doesn't benefit any other facets of my life other than during that choice.
Is BESW here?
21:05
they were a bit ago, likely had something else to do
Oh ok
BESW and Brian had me start a blog
@Jonn_Underwood: he went AFK literally right as you came into the chat
lol yeah
@Jonn_Underwood how's that going?
I was there too :P
I started it last night at like 12:30am
it's here said it would help with writing and drawing
21:07
I didn't mean to say that consumerism was the sole cause of polarization, simply that it get the lion's share of the blame for perpetuating and reinforcing the cult of the individual as a marketing strategy.
@ObliviousSage do you like Big Eyes Small Mouth?
@Jonn_Underwood Woot, I'll look at that ASAP.
Lol cool
I drew a d4
it's entertaining, but my group didn't play it more than once or twice; the optimizers among us were a little disturbed about how powerful the point multiplier options were
lol. My op friend adores it
21:09
I gotta go eat dinner I'll be back in a bit
Have you played with the Uresia: Grave of Heaven setting?
@NiteCyper: Curmudgeon has a... very odd relationship with the rules. Particularly when Rogues (and major Rogue tactics like Hiding) are concerned. He is very smart, and very knowledgeable, but not nearly as objective as he claims to be (believes himself to be, most likely).
i think it we got it to where you were getting something like 17 points to spend on powers for every 10 points you earned
hey @kryan
hi
21:10
@BESW: i absolutely agree with that, but i don't see that as a major factor in current political polarization in the US
Dawn_of_Worlds is a great game/tool - played two games and it was fun even with two people
@LitheOhm: yeah, we've really enjoyed Dawn of Worlds
Compared to sitting alone at a desk and PC making a world, that game is way more interesting
have you found a city creator which functions similarly?
@ObliviousSage I don't want to get into a discussion of partisan politics; it's rarely constructive. Let's just say that I think the us-vs-them assumptions inherent in partisan politics is founded firmly in the idea that the individual is superior to the community --and that this is an attitude enforced and disseminated by modern marketing.
no, although i suspect you could adapt Dawn of Worlds for that purpose with a bit of work; alternately, there's always Microscope
21:15
I'm not advocating a conspiracy between the two forces, simply a mutual feedback effect caused by taking advantage of and proliferating an unhealthy attitude.
@BESW wut.
how do you go from "individuals are more important than community" automatically to "us-vs-them"?
some communities can and do strongly support "us-vs-them" mentalities
ah, I have seen the Microscope page before. Aye I was thinking of changing it up and adding some guidelines from 3.5's DMG2 and The Stronghold Builder's Guidebook
@KRyan I didn't make that generalization.
@BESW: I'll certainly agree that modern marketing strongly encourages the "us v them" side of individualism, but it's hardly the origin of individualism or of polarization;
individualism has a very long history in America, and political polarization has in a lot of ways grown out of a belief that the other side is not just wrong about what's best for the community, but dangerously wrong and pushing things too far, which in turn is often the result of fear-mongering by those who derive power from the resulting polarization.
I'm talking specifically about the "cult of the individual," which holds the privilege of the individual as sacrosanct, at the expense of the community's wellbeing.
21:20
there's a new Uresia setting out
And again, that's probably a contributing factor, but it's not the origin of the problem; and of course that "cult of the individual" in many ways grows out of the idea that that is ultimately best for the community
@BESW still calling non sequitur
("that" being individualism)
Ok I'm back
@Jonn_Underwood think you'll be able to write consistently?
21:22
Yeah definitely I have nothing but time
And it's a lot of fun
Individualism does, in fact, have its benefits as well as problems, and only a really, really good sociologist/historian can convince me that they can definitively answer the question of whether the pros outweigh the cons, because it such an enormous societal impact.
Good - make it something. Time's worth investing, especially where skill is concerned.
anyway gotta go
That's cool :)
What did you think?
21:23
@ObliviousSage I'm neither arguing consumerism as the original source of the idea, nor am I claiming that the rights of the individual should be compromised for the sake of the community.
I'm a critic lol. But I'm interested in seeing more of both drawing and writing.
Was the writing any good?
Don't worry though - I'm almost always a critic where writing is concerned. People in my English class last term more-or-less cussed me out for editing their work (as I was assigned to)
@ObliviousSage I'm saying that the extreme to which individualism has been taken, such that the privilege of the individual holds the basic wellbeing of the community hostage, is clearly unhealthy.
21:24
@Jonn_Underwood it wasn't bad. I'd have to see more if I was to give any kind of constructive feedback
Well constructive criticism is always welcome
Anyway, I must dash. Back later. If this conversation has to continue, it should do so in a different venue.
@Jonn_Underwood noted, and that's good.
Ok I'll write some more in a bit
I don't learn much from my teacher assigning homework to write papers. I do learn much from editing others' works because I don't just rely on what I know. If I find a grammar issue I do research to back up my criticism
Grammar Girl is a godsend
21:26
Have a link?
I do dig the sunset/horizon cover photo
yeah, one sec
@BESW: and i agree, but again, i question the extent to which that's responsible for our current political polarization (which is something you mentioned way way back at the start of this argument; if you're dropping that then we're in agreement on all relevant points and should drop the matter)
Cool thanks! I've been reading oatmeal that Brian showed me
I like d20 systems because they're both creative but also very math-centric. I like grammar because it's math-oriented, in a sense. Few exceptions exist to a plethora of rules but there's still logical guidelines most English will follow
@ObliviousSage I mentioned liberal and conservative attitudes as one element in our culture of polarization. Nothing more. I avoid partisan politics as a matter of principle.
21:28
TheOatmeal.Com ?
@BESW let me know what you think when you get a chance.
Ohm yeah
Do you study physics?
I like that site. Have you seen the Tesla comic?
@Jonn_Underwood So far so good, havent' had a chance to look at it as closely as I'd like.
When I get time. I'm reading through my college physics book now and then. It does interest me greatly
Yeah physics as awesome
21:31
Agreed.
@BESW ok let me know what you think when you have inspected it
Do those pictures seem blurry?
A note on editing: Don't edit as you write the first draft. Not for conventional errors, do so only for content. Otherwise you'll sort of make your own writer's block. The whole second-guessing thing and all that
the top one does a little
Good to know
I am going to get a sewing machine with my mother, I will be back soon. Thanks for the web link and your input!
cool
@kryan good edit
21:53
@Jonn_Underwood Following up on @LitheOhm's suggestion about editing, there's an idea in writing (not everyone agrees with it, and it's called by many names) which I like to think of as "voyage out" and "voyage back" (I think Peter Elbow --yes, that's his real name-- coined it thus).
"Voyage out" is where you write. Just write, don't worry about consistency or style or even necessarily making a lot of sense. Just write everything you can about the subject/scene/person/whatever until you feel dry.
"Voyage back" is where you cut away what doesn't work, and edit down what does.
You take a machete (or sometimes a chainsaw) to the dense sprawling jungle that you wrote, and you hack it away and shape it until it's a lovely topiary.
Then you voyage out again.
This process gives you both unfettered creativity and total control, by not creating the desire to have both at once.
And yes, your photos look a little fuzzy. Can't tell if it's the base quality of the equipment or if you're too close for the limitations of the equipment.

« first day (925 days earlier)      last day (4337 days later) »