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Ao Saves Ao Saves is offline
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Posts: 15
Join Date: Apr 2009
Ao Saves is a sorcerer and idolater who follows false gods and will rot in Hell.
Default Re: 'Dungeons & Dragons' co-creator dies, goes to hell: - 04-14-2009, 06:23 PM

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This is besides the point because the multicolor dice used, not multisided. The rainbow is the traditional gay symbol used in everything from children’s games to candy.
Is nature homosexual, then, when light refracts through rain creating a spectrum of colors in the sky? The truth is, rainbows have been around longer than homosexuality. Did you know that red, black, and white are nazi colors, that blue and white are Jewish colors, that red and yellow are Russian colors?

The many colors of dice have nothing to do with sexuality. Some people simply like colors.

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Oh? Beyond the considerable body of D&D pornography the evidence says otherwise.
The first source you cited is a community of artists, some of whom are more serious than others. The ones who use their art to depict profanity are by no means symbols for the vast majority of gamers, and the gamers who do subscribe to those symbols do so not because of their gaming habits.

The second source is a much less serious community, and most of its membership is not D&D-oriented. It is also, for the most part, not pornographic in nature.

The third source represents an extremely small subset of gamer culture, and again should not be used as a symbol for the culture itself. I could point out, for instance, that some priests molest young boys, and that therefore all religious authority figures molest young boys (an assertion that isn't true but for a tiny subset of its membership).

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You can summon demons using magic in D&D. That, by definition is devil worshiping. It is pretty much the same if go dance naked in the woods like a wicker or sit in your parents basement and your “character” cast spells. It is worshiping Satan.
Summoning demons using magic in D&D is an evil act, even in the rules of D&D, and many people who play D&D never summon demons, but instead try to prevent evil characters from doing so. I fail to see how playing through an imaginary quest to stop an evil necromancer from raising an army of undead is analogous to worshiping Satan. It seems, in fact, quite the opposite.
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