Author Topic: Do we treat Elves too well?  (Read 8472 times)

Offline Libertad

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Do we treat Elves too well?
« on: December 11, 2011, 01:27:58 AM »
Elves have always been something of the "pet favorite" in D&D.  There seems to be more game mechanics and fluff text in favor of elves in many D&D settings.

Elves more variant sub-races and class versatility: it's plausible to many gamers for elves to be fighters, wizards, druids, etc.  Since when's the last time you've seen wizardry encouraged among dwarves in a setting?  In 4th Edition, we have three "Elf" races: Elves, Half-elves, and Eladrin (who are now celestial elves).  Also, elves in some sourcebooks are considered kin to the Fey and have a bond with these powerful creatures.  Can the same be just as readily said of Halflings, Dwarves, or Humans with some other powerful species?

In many settings, elves had the mightiest empires, the greatest magic, and the most beautiful people.  In Forgotten Realms, the Races of Faerun entry on Sun Elves reads like some kind of nationalist propaganda.  Sun Elves pursue perfection in all its forms no matter the vocation; all sun elf communities live in harmony with nature and can get wild animals to help them (despite having no racial stats to accomplish this); sun elves have the last secrets of Mythal creation and Elven High Magic (only the humans had racial-specific epic magic prestige class, but they learned their magic from the elves).  Most Sun Elves are Chaotic Good, but a significant portion of their population hates humans and views them as vermin, with some fringe factions (supported by some elven nobles) advocating genocide.  Due to poor relations with humans, many sun elves will refuse to save the life of a human even if said elf faced minimum personal risk.

In Dragonlance, the Silvanesti Elves are xenophobic, reactionary racists who view even other elves as uneducated savages at worst and impoverished elvish equivalents to hillbillies at best.  The 3rd Edition Dragonlance setting went so far as to describe this view as "Good alignment taken to extremes." :ahem

These two examples are cultural sub-races representing the "haughty elf perfectionist xenophobe," yet it seems to be a double-standard because any other sentient creature would probably be branded "non-good" alignment-wise due to their persistent intolerance towards everyone else.

Why the special treatment?  Why the exaltation in flavor text and character options?  Is it due to the perceived omnipotence of Tolkien's elves, of which D&D elves were partly based off of?  Or do we just like pointy-eared magical people?

Offline KellKheraptis

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #1 on: December 11, 2011, 01:34:58 AM »
Don't forget the Valenar...aka the Eberron Huns :P

Offline Libertad

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #2 on: December 11, 2011, 01:44:09 AM »
Don't forget the Valenar...aka the Eberron Huns :P

I think that Eberron does a better job in regards to Elf bias.  The Valenar are warlike and arrogant, but they don't get alignment exceptions in their hostile attitudes.  They are also very hard to get along with if you're not a Valenar Elf.  They tend towards Chaotic Neutral instead of Chaotic Good.

The Elves still have an isolated nation: Aerenal.  But from what I've read they're not treated as some uber-powerful civilization that reached higher than all the others, unlike Evermeet in the Forgotten Realms.
« Last Edit: December 11, 2011, 01:46:08 AM by Libertad »

Offline DonQuixote

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #3 on: December 11, 2011, 02:35:55 AM »
It's worth noting that, in my most recent campaign setting, I burned down all of the elven lands, killed approximately three-quarters of their people, and left the rest with crippling depression.

In my next campaign setting, all of the elves in existence are going to have been killed by an incursion of dread blossom swarms that they themselves caused.

Screw elves.
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Offline StreamOfTheSky

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #4 on: December 11, 2011, 02:47:41 AM »
WTF is the OP talking about?  In 3E elves suck major fucking ass (mechanically), half elves even more so.  And dwarves have more subraces, iirc.  I suppose they get a lot of fluff...I'd rather have a race that's useful to play the game with.  a 700 year lifespan isn't too handy when you're at lower hp than most other characters in a game that runs for a year in-game, tops.

I never played 2E, apparently people are still upset from back then?

Offline veekie

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #5 on: December 11, 2011, 02:50:13 AM »
Mostly its inheritance, Elves were special snowflakes in the earliest editions because of borrowing from Tolkien, and later editions took the awesome elf and added more and more 'awesome'(in quotes because they don't know real awesome if you hit them on the head with a Polymorph).

Now the oddities, if you source from mythology as well as Tolkien you'd wind up with:
Elves - Still magical, but in the faerie sense. They'd still have the same basic imagery(pointy ears, skinny), but its a type descriptor rather than a race. They mostly have innate trickery and transformative magics(and in modern times an association with nature, in the original myths theres no differentiation between 'nature' and the world) but little in the way of permanent works. Good at hiding, in existing mechanics its more like a cross between a halfling, gnome and sorceror.

Dwarves - Arguable as magical as elves. Dwarves made most of the notable gear for the Norse pantheon. They can make stuff using improbable materials, and craft artifacts as a routine. Theres not a lot of quick flashy magic, but they are fairly adept at long lasting and care-requiring stuff. They're also immensely strong for their size. Add to that, in Tolkien basically the only dwarf we ever saw was those adventurers, which is hardly going to be representative of their race. Mythical dwarves are probably artificers and wizards.

Gnomes - Mythologically they're supposed to be spirits of stone. Elementals of sort. I'm not sure where the heck the D&D gnome came from.

Kobolds - Funny enough the original description basically has them being dwarves.

Goblins - Like kobolds, the original description seem more like....nasty elves than the tribesmen we see today.
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Offline SneeR

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #6 on: December 11, 2011, 03:23:54 AM »
I'll say what I said in a different htread:
Really, elves make better rogues, gaining a proficiency they can actually use and those sensory bonuses, but elves are never painted as a roguish race in most fluff I've ever read. What kind of sense does that make?

In fact, elves are painted as pretty much everything but roguish. Warriors, wizards, archers, scouts, etc. What elves don't backtab people?

veekie pretty much hit the nail on the head there.

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Offline Mnemnosyne

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #7 on: December 11, 2011, 09:44:18 AM »
I think this is because of elven origins primarily stemming from Tolkien.  In his books, Elves are pure awesome.  There is not a single thing the Noldor are not awesome at, being bigger, smarter, stronger, faster, and just plain better than everyone, at everything, always.  The greatest of them were basically quasi-deities, able to have scuffles with Morgoth and his most powerful minions.

In D&D, their mechanical stats got toned down so that elves wouldn't be automatically superior to everyone at everything, but the concept stuck, so we get tons and tons of mechanically unsupported fluff explaining how they're better at everything than everyone else, and how they built great empires which have since fallen into ruin.  Here, we're mirroring the glory of the First Age of Middle-Earth where they built places like Gondolin.  Places like Evermeet are a parallel to Valinor, so they must be even more awesome.  Also eternal and unassailable.
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Offline Unbeliever

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #8 on: December 11, 2011, 10:22:12 AM »
Mechanically, elves have been terrible since AD&D.  And even then, any advantage was mostly due to their ability to use Haste without the silly repercussions. 

I have been of the opinion for years and years that alignments are stupid, so I'm not going to touch whatever weird alignment exceptions the OP is talking about.

Finally, the idea that the elves were once a great or mighty X but now are not is a common trope:  they are supposed to be a failing and fading people, a source of melancholia.  So, that's fair, but it's also part of the idea of elves. 

Personally, the only setting I've found that has given undue love to elves was Tolkien, and that just kind of goes with the territory.  Though I haven't looked in detail at any of the published settings besides Planescape in a while.

Offline Kajhera

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #9 on: December 11, 2011, 10:43:11 AM »
Dwarves have pretty powerful fluff, and even mechanics when it comes to enduring creation magical and nonmagical.

Halflings get to ride dinosaurs (and other things, outside Eberron) and be the best at riding dinosaurs (and other things, outside Eberron), and that's better than any tie to mysterious fey things I can think of. Halflings are actually the people who work best with animals. Elves are pansies at it by comparison...

Humans get to be anything, and often get a bunch of the good empires, but also - look at their subraces. Illumian, Elan, Vashar. What humans are, is transcedental. Become the very language ordering the universe, transcend the limitations and vulnerabilities of mortal flesh through perfection of the mind. When humanity was first created, the basic principle of humanity, the first thing we tried to do was kill the gods. Humans are incredibly ambitious.

Elves... they strive to perfect something that exists. They take a human's lifespan to consider themselves competent enough to go apply the first level of a class. They try and keep the natural order. They are impressively conservative, likely owing to their long lifespans. I hardly ever read them as usually CG - adventuring elves, maybe, but not as a civilization.

Offline X-Codes

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #10 on: December 11, 2011, 11:44:39 AM »
If I could, I would completely re-write elves in D&D, and put them in the same sort of rank as the elves of 4e are.

Elves are just elves.  They're mostly human-like with scant bits of divinity.

Eladrin are the awesome-at-everything elves, literally with divine power in them.  They wouldn't even be Humanoids, but rather Extraplanar Fey with racial HD and SLAs.

Dark Elves would be something inbetween, with a little magic and adapting to darkness.

Dark Elves would not have pitch-black skin, would not have pure white hair, and would be forbidden by divine mandate to ever wield a scimitar (nevermind two).

Offline Shadowhunter

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #11 on: December 12, 2011, 12:19:34 PM »
Elves in my setting is a seafaring folk primarily concerned with trading and acquiring prestige through cunning deals. They're a dualistic people with great pride in their own personal freedom but they also abide by the deals they make and the hierarchy aboard the ship.
If you value being able to decide yourself but also will follow agreements (usually), you better be good at making an agreement that gives you as much power as possible. Hence why shrewd deals carry prestige in their society.
They're rarely seen further inland than port cities in the lands of other races, but in which they're a very common sight.
Many a human family have bound themselves to a deal that will last for a generation or two, often with the elf as the overall more successful partner in the end.

The minority of elves that take up a land-living life to provide for the community (farmers, smiths etc.) are both revered for their sacrifice and ridiculed for their choice.
As I said, they have this whole "Dual Nature" thing going on.
Alignment-wise they're Neutral-Neutral Good as a society.


The "connected to the ancient forest" archetype is covered by the Drow, which I think looks better. They're True Neutral. They're also on the whole basically unknown to the rest of the world.

Offline shriekingdrake

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #12 on: December 15, 2011, 10:14:21 PM »
Nah--except elves don't have to wear underwear.  Seriously, the question might better be "Do we treat kobolds too well?".  I think elves are not overpowered in 3.X, even if they are better looking, smarter, and longer-lived than the rest of us.
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Offline ImperatorK

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #13 on: December 15, 2011, 10:18:41 PM »
Snip
Mind if I steal this for my own, nefarious purposes?
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Offline Shadowhunter

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #14 on: December 15, 2011, 10:48:14 PM »
Snip
Mind if I steal this for my own, nefarious purposes?

Not at all, steal away. :)

Offline midnight_v

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #15 on: December 16, 2011, 09:55:11 AM »
Somewhat obligatory Elf fix:
(click to show/hide)
... and really races of war hits it on the head as far as plausible explanation.

The pro-prettiness of D&D as far a fluff goes is generally overlooked and accepted, but it is glaring.

and seriously This is really worth reading on that note:
http://www.goblindefensefund.org/history4.html

I know he's being funny but the descriptions of thing in the fluff are just insane.
For those who won't click for fear of rick rolling :

Quote
The slurs continue, of course:

Goblin: “The concept of a fair fight is meaningless in their society. They favor ambushes, overwhelming odds, dirty tricks, and any other edge they can devise . . . goblins have a poor grasp of strategy and are cowardly by nature, tending to flee the field if a battle turns against them.”

Indeed. Cowardly swine, attacking from the bushes, fleeing when the battle turns against them. For shame. Clearly, a “poor grasp of strategy.” Nothing like elves . . .


From the 3E Monster Manual:
Elves: “Elves are cautious warriors . . . maximizing their advantage by using ambushes, snipers, and camouflage. They prefer to fire from cover and retreat before they are found, repeating this maneuver until all of their enemies are dead.”

It’s good to know that “firing from cover and retreating . . . until all of their enemies are dead” does not count as a dirty trick. Clearly, there’s just something about an elven ambush that makes them classier than a goblin ambush – probably the fact that while in melee, “elves are graceful and deadly, using complex maneuvers that are beautiful to observe.” Again, it does not require an overactive imagination to envision the writers of this trash sitting at their computers in their underwear, staring dreamily at their full-sized Legolas posters while typing this tripe.


But perhaps we are being unfair to elves. The tactics of other “good-aligned” character races are not dissimilar:

Gnomes:
“Gnomes prefer misdirection and deception over direct confrontation. They would rather befuddle or embarrass foes (other than goblinoids or kobolds) than kill them. Gnomes make heavy use of illusion magic and carefully prepared ambushes and traps whenever they can.”

Halflings:
“Halflings are cunning, resourceful survivors and opportunists . . . [they] prefer to fight defensively, usually hiding and launching ranged attacks . . . their tactics are very much like those of elves.” 

Perhaps some of these character races could hold some instructional classes on how to make one’s ambushes, misdirections, and deceptions respectable. 


There are a few other gems, such as “Goblins survive by raiding and stealing (preferably from those who cannot defend themselves easily)” – I think we can all agree this sounds more like typical adventurer behavior than anything. There are also the usual slurs about slave labor, and the repeated references to goblins being smelly and filthy but nothing we haven’t heard before
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Offline Libertad

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #16 on: December 16, 2011, 04:08:00 PM »
That Goblin Defense Fund site has some good points.  I particularly like the description of the Sunless Citadel adventure the next page over regarding the goblin merchants.  A pie which can cure any disease for 50 gp is a bargain, not a ransom.

Offline shriekingdrake

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Re: Do we treat Elves too well?
« Reply #17 on: December 16, 2011, 05:37:31 PM »
Thanks for sharing that Goblin Defense Fund site.  That was great.  :clap :clap
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