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lowkey13
Guest
*Deleted by user*
Yeah. I've never been to Canada, but I think Vancouver would feel awful familiar.As a fan of science fiction on television ...
isn't everything filmed in Canada?
Everyone can ignore as much canon as one likes, it doesn't make it any less canon. If the novel Death of the Dragon says that Azoun dies, it's canon. All future supplements dealing with Cormyr's royalty will acknowledge this event. You're free to ignore that for your games, it just requires some extra work refit all future references to the status of Cormyr to your personal timeline where Azoun still lives and rules.AND ALL DMS MUST FOLLOW CANON OR BE DESTROYED!
Still doesn't make it less canon. It's events are referenced all over whenever a supplement talks about spellfire.I read “Spellfire” when it first came out. It is the first time I agreed with my wife that a lot of spin off novels are JUNK FICTION. It read like someone wrote a bad novel about his Monty hall pc.
Well, until the lead actor becomes famous and pouts over having to commute from Hollywood.As a fan of science fiction on television ...
isn't everything filmed in Canada?
Oh absolutely. Having Elminster show up and throw around some 9th level spells to fix things sucks.
Yeah. I love Supernatural, which is (was?) filmed there. They've had cases in Sioux City, Cedar Rapids, Sioux Falls, and Saint Louis -- all towns in which I've spent considerable amount of time and all of which have some architectural norms in them (at least a range). St. Louis is the only one that might have happened, there. The others are somewhat... mis-characterized. It's not outside of my ability to suspend disbelief (nowhere close), but it is humorous.One of my guilty pleasures is binge-watching the CW shows (shhhh.... don't hate me). So since Netflix released the most recent seasons of the Arrowverse shows as well the 100, I have been trapped in an infinite loop of snarky, "Oh noes, Canada again" comments.
Oh absolutely. Having Elminster show up and throw around some 9th level spells to fix things sucks. But it is poor storytelling to introduce a person that is capable of saving the world easily, and then asking you to do it because they can't be bothered. Or in the case of published adventures, the authors just ignoring the issue and letting the DM answer the question if the players ask.
And that's nice for you. But it shouldn't even be necessary. These are people that make D&D adventures as a job. This is something that a lot of people do for free because it is fun, and they are getting paid for it. A little bit of thought about what the great and powerful are doing during the Adventure Paths isn't too much to ask.