ProgBard
First Post
We all seem to like lore, we just choose to use it differently.
This is true, and salient. I don't think you'll find may players, even in this discussion, on the side of "Lore is stupid! No settings! Trash it all!" (Well, I mean, that's kind of where you are with Dungeon World, I guess, but that's probably orthogonal to a 5e-centric discussion anyway.)
Make no mistake that I love lore. In my home campaign, our group's paladin started off with the concept that she was a secret heir to a throne; in our subsequent discussions, we lighted on "Well, the Dalelands are currently without a king ...." So I was delighted to find the sidebar in the FRCS about Aencar, the Mantled King, as an existing lore hook I could use - but as a place to inspire a creation of my own, Fenian Fitz-Mantle, Aencar's secret bastard and the progenitor of a hidden royal Dales bloodline that the PC was the iheritor of. (Well, one inheritor, anyway, since I also took the opportunity to make this backstory hook into a complication.)
In other areas, I'm happy to draw on lore that's extracanonical to the setting. My gang's currently trying to stop the ascension of the King in Yellow on Toril, which I suppose is canon only in the sense that it's heavily suggested the default D&D multiverse has ties to the Cthulhu mythos. But they've also faced the servitors of other, post-Lovecraft Great Old Ones: Cynothoglys, the Mortician God (invented by Thomas Ligotti) and Old Leech (invented by Laird Barron). So, again, I'm a syncretist and a magpie, throwing in whatever I find interesting that I think will work.
I think that another way of parsing some of the disagreements here, though everyone digs lore, is the distinction between those who view lore primarily as something that serves the needs of the DM versus those who see it as something the game ought to serve. The usual caveats apply here that those are gross oversimplifications, but as the saying goes, "All models are wrong; some are useful." I suspect those two categories map more or less to my descriptivist/prescriptivist divide, but may be a little more intuitive to someone who's not, well, me.
