John Quixote
tinyurl.com/OdndCe
Since polls always seem to leave out the more nuanced positions, I'm posting this question for discussion only.
When you create a campaign world, do you prefer a "kitchen sink" approach (if it's in the rulebook, it's in the campaign setting; creates a world that looks like the Mos Eisley cantina or the 80s D&D cartoon) or a more restrictive paradigm where you pick and choose what exists in the game world? The latter approach would be more like your typical fantasy novel: in Middle-Earth, there's no need for gnomes because hobbits fill the "little hero" niche, and the variety of monsters in Middle-Earth certainly wouldn't fill a Monster Manual.
On a related note... monsters. Do you prefer to portray them as true races/species, or unique entities? Is there an entire race of hydras out there, or just the one until Hercules kills it? Which, do you suppose, makes for the better fantasy campaign (of any sub-genre you like to talk about)?
When you create a campaign world, do you prefer a "kitchen sink" approach (if it's in the rulebook, it's in the campaign setting; creates a world that looks like the Mos Eisley cantina or the 80s D&D cartoon) or a more restrictive paradigm where you pick and choose what exists in the game world? The latter approach would be more like your typical fantasy novel: in Middle-Earth, there's no need for gnomes because hobbits fill the "little hero" niche, and the variety of monsters in Middle-Earth certainly wouldn't fill a Monster Manual.
On a related note... monsters. Do you prefer to portray them as true races/species, or unique entities? Is there an entire race of hydras out there, or just the one until Hercules kills it? Which, do you suppose, makes for the better fantasy campaign (of any sub-genre you like to talk about)?