Setting Junkies - How do you get your fix these days?

Mercurius

Legend
It seems that, for the proverbial "Settings Junky" - a gamer that collects setting material without the intention of directly using it in a game - the recent 4E era have been lean in terms of the amount of material being published. If we go back and look at the history of RPGs, we may be in the leanest time since the early 80s, before the time of the setting accessory book, probably first popularized with the Mystara gazetteers and then the Forgotten Realms FR series.

The 90s were the Golden Age for D&D settings, and thus a wonderful era for setting junkies, with the development of the Forgotten Realms and the birth of such classics as Dark Sun, Spelljammer, Birthright, Planescape, and the "From the Ashes" version of Greyhawk, as well as lesser known settings like Al-Qadim, Jakandor, and Kalamar, and a few new non-D&D fantasy settings like Earthdawn and Everway.

The 00s brought 3E D&D and the OGL, leading to a vast plethora of fantasy settings, from Eberron to Midnight to Dawnforge to the Scarred Lands. We also saw the new iconic kitchen sink setting Golarion developed for the Pathfinder game.

As we all know, in 2008 4E D&D was published and with it the new GSL, which proved to be much more prohibitive than the OGL was. The GSL, coupled with Wizards of the Coast's new minimalist policy with fantasy settings - just three books per setting, one setting per year - led to a lull in D&D setting material, at least official to 4E. Paizo published setting sourcebooks by the dozens, in the form of the Pathfinder Campaign Setting and the Chronicles and Companions series.

Which leads me to the purpose of this thread and my question. Given the above fact, that during the 90s through about 2008, a large quantity (although not always quality) of D&D-related setting material was being published, giving the setting junky a plethora to choose from, yet for the last 2-3 years the amount of new fantasy setting material has dwindled to, if not a trickle, then a slow stream. We have not seen any real new setting material for 4E D&D - just reworkings and updates of core settings (Forgotten Realms, Eberron, and Dark Sun).

So how do you get your fix these days? Is it through the frequent Pathfinder Chronicles books? Other genre setting books? What jewels have you found in the last few years to share with us other setting junkies?

Speaking for myself, I collect a fair number of the Pathfinder Chronicles books; I buy the WotC setting stuff when it comes out; I purchase settings from other games that appeal to me, such as Hellfrost and Sundered Skies for Savage Worlds, and I occasionally flesh out my collection with older stuff. I do miss the days of multiple D&D settings being developed and detailed through sourcebooks, though.

What about you? How do you get your fix?
 

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In my previous 4E sandbox game, I was using the Pathfinder Golarion setting. At the time (circa 2009), the game was mostly in Varisia. There wasn't much published at the time in the Chronicles and Companion books.

My game started slowly collapsing mid way through 2009 where we played less and less often, and eventually died towards the end of 2009. Never got around to using the regional splabooks like Taldor, Cheliax, etc ... The players were ready to take a voyage to Absalom before the game completely collapsed and eventually died.
 


I've turned to other game systems, notably Savage Worlds. Picked up Slipstream, Hellfrost and Red Sands. The Savage Worlds game also has made it dirt easy to build your own worlds - the two I'm working on now is Walmart - Chapter 11 and Crimson Empires, as well as slowly converting my own homebrew D&D world of Amberos.
 


I've turned to other game systems, notably Savage Worlds. Picked up Slipstream, Hellfrost and Red Sands. The Savage Worlds game also has made it dirt easy to build your own worlds -

This. The system can handle so much that it opens up tons of setting possibilities. Anything from old school fantasy, cool fantasy (Sundered Skies) to Deadlands (weird west), Space 1889, Weird War II, Vietnam, Runepunk, Necropolis 2053, Supers, etc.

Plus there are so many fan converts of other games, movies, etc.
 

I've never been one to use published settings (half the fun I get from D&D is making my own) but is the basic premise of the OP correct? There are only many settings published for 4E so far but the "settings per year" doesn't seem that out of whack to me. Is 4E really light on new settings?

Stepping back to the big picture, I'd really like to know the paper RPG demographics and whether any let-up in settings is more due to fewer gamers than new systems.
 

Like those who have replied above, I've been getting my fix from Golarion and the many and varied Savage Worlds settings.

In addition to those, I trawl Obsidian Portal on a regular basis and see what people are posting there. There really is some great homebrewed content on that site on also on various blogs.
 

I'm trying to actually use some of the stuff I have. :cool:

I'm wrapping up my Freeport game and am looking at the possibilities for Scarred Lands and Oathbound.
 


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