doctorbadwolf
Heretic of The Seventh Circle
Exactly what I like about it.I agree it feels more like a Star Wars cantina.
The world feels bigger and more vibrant to me if there are places where you can walk into a bar and see 30 different kinds of person.
I think of it a bit more like Gallopogos Islands than Star Wars, though. I think that when people assume that all these sentient species would have trouble existing in the same world, they’re experiencing a sort of confirmation bias issue. Probably has a name, but basically because our real world only has one sentient species of advanced tool users, folks feel like anything else is unbelievable, but humans and our various tool using cousins coexisted, traded in big caves where giant snails were kept in southern Europe, fought over resources without exterminating eachother, etc, for thousands of years. I see no reason why a world shouldn’t have a type of elf for every island.

Beyond that, most of human history is more “cosmopolitan” than humanocentric medieval D&D wants the world to be. There isn’t actually a time in recorded history where no one in Britain had ever travelled far enough to see cities where most people looked wildly different from them, or where trade ports didn’t tend to have people from Asia and Africa and Europe, speaking dozens of languages. Not only that, the most interesting settings in history, like colonial Mexico, were absolutely wild in the oddball combinations of peoples you could see in the same city market.
I want my D&D to be like that, and unless you have players who buy in hard to your setting and it’s cultures, the easiest way to get that vibe is with many races.