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(+10)

Good morning, everyone! β˜€

A comment on this page got a little out of hand, so we wanted to address it. Below you will find the comment in question, followed by our official statement (with the help of my amazing wife).

Thank you~ πŸ³οΈβ€βš§οΈπŸ³οΈβ€πŸŒˆ


(+3)

Honestly respect for engaging so kindly with something so obviously bad faith /gen. Wish I was half as nice as yall fhfjddjd

(2 edits) (+4)(-6)

I want to preface, that I do not agree with the commenter.  I don't think they should have even made that post,  but that's just my opinion.  However, the bigotry topic aside, I find it concerning for that page to even be in there at all.  I'm pretty sure that you can't legally prevent someone from playing a game (even in video games, a person can just create a new account), especially a tabletop game played solo in one's own home.  So even if that page is on there, I don't think it's enforcable, at least from a strictly legal stance.  (I'll P.S. that I'm most familiar with Canadian Law, but a 5 minute cursory research period has led me to this conclusion)

(+11)(-2)

I want to clarify that the purpose of that page is not to establish a binding legal contract. Clearly, it's not enforceable. I'm not going to take legal action against anyone.

The point of that page (as it states) is to make it bold and clear that if you agree or support bigotry in any form, I don't want you to play my game. And furthermore, it's not the game for you. That's all~

(+8)(-2)

Lots of games on this site have basically this exact page. Literally everyone knows its not enforceable. The point is to send a message. It's symbolic--it tells us that the people who made the game are with the good guys. I kinda thought everyone understood this.

(+2)(-1)

perfect reply