James Gasik
We don't talk about Pun-Pun
Even Tolkien fails to make travel interesting- there's a huge section in the middle of The Two Towers that took me a long time to finally get through without skipping ahead as a youngster. Sure, when he starts expositing about the history of Middle Earth, that gets a little interesting, but consider how more exciting travel is in a visual medium, when during The Fellowship of the Ring, they sail down river and see the great statues of ancient Kings carved into the sides of mountains.I've actually had a @Snarf Zagyg style post brewing in my head for some time now about "D&D as oral tradition" vs. the Exploration pillar of play - most new players haven't read (in my experience) much in the way of older fantasy novels. I love Tolkien as much as anyone, but LotR definitely sucks all of the air out of the room for whatever reason. For Sparrowhawk / Fafhrd and the Grey Mauser / the Fellowship, getting to a new place is a big deal and a significant element of the story, while Tony Stark / Homelander / whoever can pop off to the Middle East for a big fight for the afternoon and be home in NYC for dinner. I really think that the received ideas / tropes of fantasy have shifted for the current generation.
I can't blame authors (or DM's) with wanting to just skip past that and get to more exciting parts of travel. A few years back, I was playing in a Pathfinder game, and the GM went on a rant about how he hated teleportation magic and how it would be banned in his game.
We got sent on a long mission to a far off region of the world, and this is how it went:
*We board a ship in the nearest port city. We travel for weeks. We have an encounter with a floating island (cool!) and a sunken ship created by the Azer for the Efreeti (who trade with the world, but obviously don't care to get wet- also cool by the way). We reach a port city adjacent to the desert.
We stock up and my Wizard bought some scrolls for the journey. We see a gigantic golem in the desert- we avoid it. A few Survival checks are made. We get to our destination, then on the return trip, nothing of substance occurs. When I asked about it, the GM admitted that he basically ran out of interesting things to engage us on the journey.
"So, why is teleportation magic bad again?"
He sighed and conceded the point. Some times, travel, especially to places you've already been, isn't all that engaging, and random encounters with enemies on the road is just so much padding, between a few interesting sights.