Which, of course, isn't a word at all, but that's obviously better than just using a regular-ass English word to mean the opposite of what it actually means in the dictionary
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Nowadays that would be an absurd thing to say, when marketing *anything*, much less specifically marketing a work of fantasy to an audience of video game players We don't realize how much things have changed and how relatively quickly they have
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Yeah, and to be fair, if the target audience is 11 or so, they're probably highly unlikely to get the reference to the Philosopher's Stone on its own merits. What probably caused the issue was the word "philosopher" there, which is admittedly confusing in context.
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I still wonder whether Stan Lee's original title "The Mutants" would have worked. It's not like "X-Men" is any more familiar.
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I still remember trying to tackle my favorite from Infocom, Moonmist, never realizing that whatever I'd type in for my favorite color was changing the plot. (And NOW I find out they made an NES game called Tombs & Treasure?! One last treasure to find, apparently!)
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