VelvetViolet
Adventurer
There are a number of mythological afterlives/pantheons that could be focused around: (some have been condensed due to occupying similar space)
Amerindian (Great Plains, etc) -- this is where the Happy Hunting Grounds comes from, includes deities like Coyote and Raven, unexplored territory
Celtic (Irish, Gallic, Welsh) -- includes the Tuatha De Danann and Arthurian mythos
Chinese -- Celestial Bureaucracy, plus the idea of hell as a place of purification rather than torment
Egyptian -- no explanation needed
Greco-Roman -- no explanation needed
Indian -- this isn't explored very often, and has an interesting comparison with Zoroastrianism in the Ahura/Deva conflict
Japanese -- unexplored territory
Mesoamerican (Aztec, Maya) -- unexplored territory
Mesopotamian (Arabian, Babylonian, Canaanite, Zoroastrian) -- unexplored territory (aside from Tiamat and Bahamut, who don't even resemble their original myths), also the precursor to Abrahamic faiths
Norse -- no explanation needed
Slavic -- unexplored territory
South American (Inca) -- unexplored territory
West African/Caribbean (Yoruban, Voodoo) -- unexplored territory
What would be really great is if there was already some OGC books about the real-world pantheons, like what Scion did.
EDIT: Okay, Bastion Press' Lore of the Gods has all OGC text for the Greek, Egyptian, Norse and Mesopotamian pantheons, which is great. And I found a Celtic pantheon netbook.
Amerindian (Great Plains, etc) -- this is where the Happy Hunting Grounds comes from, includes deities like Coyote and Raven, unexplored territory
Celtic (Irish, Gallic, Welsh) -- includes the Tuatha De Danann and Arthurian mythos
Chinese -- Celestial Bureaucracy, plus the idea of hell as a place of purification rather than torment
Egyptian -- no explanation needed
Greco-Roman -- no explanation needed
Indian -- this isn't explored very often, and has an interesting comparison with Zoroastrianism in the Ahura/Deva conflict
Japanese -- unexplored territory
Mesoamerican (Aztec, Maya) -- unexplored territory
Mesopotamian (Arabian, Babylonian, Canaanite, Zoroastrian) -- unexplored territory (aside from Tiamat and Bahamut, who don't even resemble their original myths), also the precursor to Abrahamic faiths
Norse -- no explanation needed
Slavic -- unexplored territory
South American (Inca) -- unexplored territory
West African/Caribbean (Yoruban, Voodoo) -- unexplored territory
What would be really great is if there was already some OGC books about the real-world pantheons, like what Scion did.
EDIT: Okay, Bastion Press' Lore of the Gods has all OGC text for the Greek, Egyptian, Norse and Mesopotamian pantheons, which is great. And I found a Celtic pantheon netbook.
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