
It's not. This is all just conjecture. I can SEE Keepers being more into polyamory. But if you can't, that's fine. Lore can be interpreted in many ways.
Discussion of "Polyamory: A Roleplaying Guide" |
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RE: Polyamory: A Roleplaying Guide |
12-24-2014, 03:16 PM
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It's not. This is all just conjecture. I can SEE Keepers being more into polyamory. But if you can't, that's fine. Lore can be interpreted in many ways.
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RE: Polyamory: A Roleplaying Guide |
12-24-2014, 03:23 PM
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I mean I am most likely just jumping on a stupid tangent going "how did I miss this?!" since miqo'te and non-traditional/non-conventional relationships have been brought up in a guide about polyamory.
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RE: Polyamory: A Roleplaying Guide |
12-24-2014, 03:33 PM
(This post was last modified: 12-24-2014, 03:37 PM by Eve Malusion.)
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If memory serves male keepers are significantly less common than female ones. Its implied they have multiple females with one male, simply because of a neccessity to keep the tribe going, due to small tribes with a heavily unbalanced gender distribution.
One part that refers to this is: "Rarely do even the largest Keeper of the Moon families have more than two or three sons. This is not by choice. Nature merely sees to it that more females are born to this race." From the miqo'te naming conventions. This doesn't really refer to love, but its likely what sourced the belief that multiple females would have children with the same male in Keeper society. As others said as well, sorry if I misunderstood the question. ![]() |
RE: Polyamory: A Roleplaying Guide |
12-24-2014, 03:52 PM
(This post was last modified: 12-24-2014, 03:55 PM by K'nahli.)
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I feel it's a duty in the non-obligatory sense. A female might be socially pressured to bear children by family members/the elders but I have reservations with the idea that they have no choice, it makes no sense to treat the females with such a lack of respect towards their own, free will without punishing them/casting them out of the tribe.
As for the nuhn, well sure he can potentially sleep with numerous women but it's not like impregnating many women at once is a very good idea, not these days at least. I can't possibly view it like a "harem" scenario because I imagine that everyone would regard the title with great respect. It represents the strongest(male at least) hunter in the tribe but he has no place making a game of it and if people deemed that someone were too irresponsible to hold the title then that would be considered a blemish against his name in spite of his strength. Viewing it in such a shallow sense feels like a more modern sense of thinking where young people are culturally conditioned to make light of casual sex. A tribe has serious responsibilities as well as a particular way of thinking and acting that is isolated from the majority of the civilized world. While some of you may think: Quote:"Wow, permission and approval to sleep with several different women and have no-one bat an eye... sounds great!" ...a tia's view on the matter might probably be more like: Quote:"Acknowledgement as the finest hunter and the honour of passing on 'my' own line to our tribe's next generation. I hope that I can someday earn myself such a blessing." ![]() Characters: Andre Winter (Hy'ur) / K'nahli Yohko (Miqo'te) |
RE: Polyamory: A Roleplaying Guide |
12-24-2014, 04:05 PM
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how many people who rp polyamory would actually do it irl? in my own experience, people have used polyamory as a way to deflect criticism regarding their poorly-written/poorly-played erp characters
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RE: Polyamory: A Roleplaying Guide |
12-24-2014, 04:06 PM
(This post was last modified: 12-24-2014, 04:09 PM by Faye.)
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But to give an answer in vain: Does it really matter? If someone wants to ERP everyone and call it polyamory, more power to 'em. I don't see why it should really matter to anyone. Likely, the type of people to do that would practice polyamory IRL, even if closeted, if they could find the right partner. Regardless, why does it matter what someone would or wouldn't do IRL? I wouldn't do 75% of the things my characters do. If you would do all the same things your character would, you're not role-playing, you're inserting yourself into a fantasy universe.
Mod note by FreelanceWizard: I removed an accusation from the first line of this post to help keep the thread civil. |
RE: Polyamory: A Roleplaying Guide |
12-24-2014, 04:07 PM
(This post was last modified: 12-24-2014, 04:20 PM by Edvyn.)
![]() (12-24-2014, 04:06 PM)Faye Wrote: But to give an answer in vain: Does it really matter? If someone wants to ERP everyone and call it polyamory, more power to 'em. I don't see why it should really matter to anyone. Likely, the type of people to do that would practice polyamory IRL, even if closeted, if they could find the right partner. Regardless, why does it matter what someone would or wouldn't do IRL? I wouldn't do 75% of the things my characters do. If you would do all the same things your character would, you're not role-playing, you're inserting yourself into a fantasy universe.i am bringing up an actual concern - namely that there are people who use polyamory as an excuse rather than a storytelling device it doesn't matter what someone would/wouldn't do irl, I am questioning people's intent in rping "polyamory" as I have seen far too many cases in my years spent in other games/sites of creepy straight dudes playing lesbians that sleep with everyone and aggressively seek out people to erp with - even if those people don't want to erp with them. these dudes almost definitely wouldn't practice polyamory irl, some I've dealt with actively opposed it. is it wrong to find an ethical problem in genuine sexualities/sexual practices being exploited by horny nerds looking for cheap imaginary sex? Mod note by FreelanceWizard: Removed some quoted text that I excised from the thread. |
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