I imagine that many of us will agree that they play D&D to escape, but Brennan Lee Miligan is not. The legendary dimension wants to stare at the master of the 20 basement, and if the false retires, it is fine.
“I’m not trying to avoid dirt,” Miligan says when we talk about the Excanderia infinite: diversion and D&D. “I keep listening to the escape. I’m not drowning in the seat of a children like a child in the heart of Fantasia, I can’t do anything other than finding this secret wisdom, I can tell a story about a better world, and we can get a better story about a better world. What was that?No it’s not! ‘ So I always have this problem. I need to do some turmoil in the forest there. “
Miligan is not criticizing anyone who plays D&D or the best tablet RPG, of course. To get away from the world. Rather, dealing with heavy problems during the game, he helps work in the dark times in real life.
“I like stories where we can talk about how we are feeling, and I don’t get any relief or recovery by hiding my face in the real world.” “It does not comfort me to look at my face. It doesn’t give me anything to look away from it. So don’t say that I am just in a purely ideology business, but it is said that I think great imaginary stories are about the things that you do not even try to do in life.”
@Gameser
♬ Original sound – Gamesrader.com
Fellow D&D legend and critical role DM Matt Mercer agree. “Yes, I would say, there is a difference between the imaginary and imaginary concept of power. There is a difference between the ability to create a world to play this world and … those who do not think of you to do so, but despite this knowledge, this victory can be better than this, we can learn better than this. But it is empowered.
Amen for her.
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