True. But lore can also be much more easily ignored or changed than mechanics can.I think that's a controversial claim! The game is one of shared fiction. Bad fiction can make the game unplayable; unpopular fiction can make the game unplayed.
Um, yes, people are going to assume what they read in the PHB, DMG, and MM are the default? Don't know what's sad about that."Default" lore!?!? Oh, my. What a sad notion.
According to Mordenkeinens, the Trancing continues to connect them to their origins.I simply disagree. Having fey origin doesn't really give me anything as a player or DM to latch on to. How does it affect their behavior or how they interact?
In the US, family origins matter less, but there can be a sense of fondness for and even affinity with.I mean many of my ancestors are from Norway, but other than some interest in my heritage it doesn't really have any affect on who I am.
Fair enough. Each player makes the game ones own.Halflings on the other hand? Lucky, brave and nimble help me build an image in my head along with the rest of their lore. I find halflings more evocative than elves.
But it's just like, an opinion, man.
I just read this now.So why can't humans have a related race, like giants do?
I take the opposite point of view. The general description in the PHB is a chassis on which to build my campaign setting and I'm glad they don't waste time and energy on it. That leaves rooms for different settings with different assumptions like FR, Eberron or my own home brew. The malleability of D&D is one of it's greatest assets, not a weakness.Um, yes, people are going to assume what they read in the PHB, DMG, and MM are the default? Don't know what's sad about that.
What's sad is D&D's middle ground waffling around in the No Man's Land between generic system and built-in setting. Most games these days either have default lore intertwined with the rules, or go of their way to emphasize their lack of it. D&D's refusal to commit in either direction hurts it thematically.
also how common the hobbits never seemed to care about the world it seems most odd?
In any case, I originally didn't like the idea as an origin even if it didn't have those issues. And I kind of liked the idea of them being a "found race" (did Iluvatar just have something too subtle in his song that the Valar missed it among the excitement about his first two children?).
If "The greatest trick the devil ever played was convincing the world that he did not exist", WOTC's greatest trick may have been convincing many players and DMs that they need WOTC's story team and their lore in the defaut rules."Default" lore!?!? Oh, my. What a sad notion.
I'm pretty sure that in Tolkien's work, Hobbits are an offshoot of Men.In any case, I originally didn't like the idea as an origin even if it didn't have those issues. And I kind of liked the idea of them being a "found race" (did Iluvatar just have something too subtle in his song that the Valar missed it among the excitement about his first two children?).