I spin my dice like beyblades, actually
I spin my dice like beyblades, actually
It’s actually the arcane spell list from Pathfinder 2e
Oh BOY. So I’m currently playing an automaton character in a Strength of Thousands campaign (pf2e), and I’m playing her very much like a stereotypical robot: no emotion, strongly rational, all that good stuff. One thing that I’ve made core to the character is her ability to learn and grow, but I don’t like the idea that a lack of emotion is a flaw that needs to be overcome. So, my philosophy is “make her become emotionally intelligent, not emotional”.
Sadly, I think with the way I play her, people would anthropomorphize her hard.
MAYBE IT’S TIME FOR NEW BONES MF
Razira’s about to go all Monty Python on these fellas.
Oh, these bitches gay! Good for them, good for them!
Hello! I know I’m late, but I had to say something. It seems to me you might have misunderstood how the whole aromanticism deal, or orientations in general, work.
Being aro is about attraction, not action. Choosing not to date is not the same as being aromantic, just how choosing to get into romantic relationships doesn’t make you automatically allo. Aromanticism is a huge and complex variety of experiences, but none of them ever cite their lack of attraction as a choice.
As for you, maybe you only realized it recently or it changed overtime (yes that can happen), or you’re an allo who decided they’re happier not trying to pursue a relationship. These are possible explanations that I could think of and given the sheer breadth of the aro experience, there might be other explanations, but I’m not going to pretend I know more about you than you do. Either way, these are all perfectly fine ways to feel and I’m happy you figured something out for yourself. Just calling being aro a choice does not sit right with me.
Mon-keigh just functions as a sort of slur for non-eldar, most commonly used for humans in-universe, there’s not really much further subtext. It is similar to the actual human word monkey to invoke a sense of arrogance, but it’s changed cuz it’s just not exactly kosher to refer to people as monkeys irl (even though scientifically speaking, humans are monkeys).
Apart from that, it’s mostly just a reference to this