Dressing your powerlessness as an attack doesn't hide your weakness. It highlights it. Maybe next time, just chill the frick out and stop being such a weird, little freak.
11 months ago
Anonymous
You're just a hostile little homosexual, I don't need to dress anything as any kind of attack, because you can not and will never be able to tell me what is important to me or anyone else.
Stay mad and die mad about it, it's not going to change.
11 months ago
Anonymous
Dick is important to you.
11 months ago
Anonymous
>Dressing your powerlessness as an attack doesn't hide your weakness.
Then don’t?
11 months ago
Anonymous
hey guy, i think you're the one being weird
11 months ago
Anonymous
>projecting this hard
You need to take some kind of fricking meds.
dungeons and dragons was meant to foster creativity and help people develop their natural talents. the game was meant to encourage creative solutions to complex problems.
>I can't recall the last time I met someone who was good at math, logic, or problem solving while playing d&d.
That's partially because most players don't learn the rules. Every time I tried to give D&D and Pathfinder a chance online, I was the only person who typed my character sheet in instead of using some automated generator shit.
I was a step teacher a few years ago, and the one time I subbed for a math class was appalling. The normal teacher had an aide that ended up doing most of the work (I just needed to fill the seat for legal reasons), but holy shit this aide’s version of “teaching math” was how to push the right buttons on the calculator. The students had literally zero understanding of what they were doing, just rote memorization of which buttons to push to turn a given input into the desired output. I finished the day feeling disgusted at what the admins and faculty there considered education.
That’s all to say that I completely believe you. Even basic math is seemingly “too hard” to even teach, so I’m not surprised to see these sorts of trends springing up.
Back in my day teachers said we wouldn't be running around with calculators in our pockets, we do now, which leads to kids having even less motivation to learn anything, because why the frick should they bother to memorize things the brick in their pocket can solve faster than them, that being said being able to do minor mental math has been pretty helpful because I'm far too lazy to actually use calculators.
WotC needed to cast to a wider audience for more money.
As it turns out, vape-for-brains zoomers are the widest audience a company can appeal to, and are the least responsible with their money.
Silly anon you have always been at that stage, always fleeing others because you are poor social skills. You aren't the guardian of the game, you are just a minority among the fanbase
Yes, but it can still be important to you
then it is not just a game.
You don't get to tell me what is important to me.
Then stop me. Do something to stop me from doing so. Do literally anything to make me stop. Oh, you can't? Then I guess you need to shut the frick up.
I don't have to stop you from something you cannot do, mongoloid.
Dressing your powerlessness as an attack doesn't hide your weakness. It highlights it. Maybe next time, just chill the frick out and stop being such a weird, little freak.
You're just a hostile little homosexual, I don't need to dress anything as any kind of attack, because you can not and will never be able to tell me what is important to me or anyone else.
Stay mad and die mad about it, it's not going to change.
Dick is important to you.
>Dressing your powerlessness as an attack doesn't hide your weakness.
Then don’t?
hey guy, i think you're the one being weird
>projecting this hard
You need to take some kind of fricking meds.
D&D used to involve math, logic, and creative problem solving. It was the 'smart kids' game. Other kids didn't play it because it was for 'nerds'.
I can't recall the last time I met someone who was good at math, logic, or problem solving while playing d&d.
dungeons and dragons was meant to foster creativity and help people develop their natural talents. the game was meant to encourage creative solutions to complex problems.
>I can't recall the last time I met someone who was good at math, logic, or problem solving while playing d&d.
That's partially because most players don't learn the rules. Every time I tried to give D&D and Pathfinder a chance online, I was the only person who typed my character sheet in instead of using some automated generator shit.
That just means you’re too stupid to use a generator. Not understanding recentish (last 15 years) technology is not something to brag about , boomer.
This is like saying that you don't need to know carpentry because you have a circular saw.
Now we have players that refuse to play offline because subtracting 5 or 10 on a roll is too much math to do. I wish I was making this up.
I was a step teacher a few years ago, and the one time I subbed for a math class was appalling. The normal teacher had an aide that ended up doing most of the work (I just needed to fill the seat for legal reasons), but holy shit this aide’s version of “teaching math” was how to push the right buttons on the calculator. The students had literally zero understanding of what they were doing, just rote memorization of which buttons to push to turn a given input into the desired output. I finished the day feeling disgusted at what the admins and faculty there considered education.
That’s all to say that I completely believe you. Even basic math is seemingly “too hard” to even teach, so I’m not surprised to see these sorts of trends springing up.
Back in my day teachers said we wouldn't be running around with calculators in our pockets, we do now, which leads to kids having even less motivation to learn anything, because why the frick should they bother to memorize things the brick in their pocket can solve faster than them, that being said being able to do minor mental math has been pretty helpful because I'm far too lazy to actually use calculators.
You choose who you play with.
D&D in the 70s was about fricking around with your friends. Nothing you said is correct.
You've never played first or basic
I have, actually. But to be clear, I'm basing this on what my dad said playing D&D in the 70s was like.
WotC needed to cast to a wider audience for more money.
As it turns out, vape-for-brains zoomers are the widest audience a company can appeal to, and are the least responsible with their money.
could you repeat that anon i couldnt hear you with your head so far up your own ass
Take your dick out your mouth homosexual
Unironically we are at the final terminal stage
Silly anon you have always been at that stage, always fleeing others because you are poor social skills. You aren't the guardian of the game, you are just a minority among the fanbase
I don’t know anon, if YOUR life “just a game”? Or do you act as though it’s as real as your PCs act as though theirs is?
Why do you heff to be mad?
It is
EVERYTHING'S A GODDAMN GAME
>Is it just a game, though?
Yes, it is just a game.
And yes, it is still important to me.