MichaelSomething
Legend
I bet Halfings are super popular on the DM Guild! I bet there are dozens of Halfing themed high selling supplements there! I'm sure there's a strong desire there and plenty of people working to fulfill it.
I searched DM's Guild content for 'halfling' and 'elf'. There are 371 items compared to 699 for elf. That seems to be a fair amount.I bet Halfings are super popular on the DM Guild! I bet there are dozens of Halfing themed high selling supplements there! I'm sure there's a strong desire there and plenty of people working to fulfill it.
I have never been happy with the chokehold that Tolkien races have on the game. I wouldn’t mind seeing elves and dwarves get the boot too. Have a race section that isn’t shackled to dead authors is my goal.
Yeah my halfling postman (monk/ranger) has to be a halfling. His story is that he was the most skilled martial arts student of his gen. He noticed first that they were being trained to protect the town, get people hidden who could t fight, etc, and started helping teach by the time he was 13.It seems to me that Halflings are archetypes of the common folk (usually pastoral). That is probably why Tolkien made them up. I don't see any other race/species can be used in that niche.
Certainly, I can't imagine Merry the Morris Dancer (Monk) with his in your face attitute being anything other than a Halfling.
Yeah I’d say that’s pretty popular.I searched DM's Guild content for 'halfling' and 'elf'. There are 371 items compared to 699 for elf. That seems to be a fair amount.
I thought Dragonborn were a 3e thing. (though might be thinking of Half-Dragon, which to me is pretty much the same anyway)1. Pushing out halflings specifically was never a goal. It was always about pushing out dead weight.
2. Halflings have never gained any traction in the game. Not really. Every new setting completely rewrites them in a vain attempt to try and they still are not played as often as other races.
3. The two new races added to DnD have both proven fantastically popular even considering that Dragonborn are covered in 4e cooties.
There's our difference, then: I'd rather that hold be tightened rather than loosened or removed.But again I repeat that it’s more to do with the stranglehold of Tolkien.
Half-Orcs and Gnomes, though each having their strong supporters, have never been all that broadly popular over the years. Half-Elves, on the other hand, are consistently hella popular regardless of edition. No surprise that removing them is generating widespread squawks.Half orcs are getting the boot and there’s barely a hint of pushback. Half elves get the same treatment and it’s hundreds of pages of argument.
Even the idea of pushing out gnomes doesn’t really get much of a reaction.
Even in 3.5 where IIRC they were just “elf but less good”.Half-Elves, on the other hand, are consistently hella popular regardless of edition.
Original Dragonborn were a 3.5E thing, but original Dragonborn were.... Weird. As in "You're some other race who's turned into as a platnium dragon-person due to Bahamut devotion and will lose the form if you ever comit an evil act".I thought Dragonborn were a 3e thing. (though might be thinking of Half-Dragon, which to me is pretty much the same anyway)
People like a lot of things. People like Tieflings and Dragonborn and Genasi as well. Which is the point I keep trying to make. Races that don't appear in Tolkien have become quite popular, despite the Tolkien races getting top billing in every single book and supplement. The amount of material about elves in Forgotten Realms is massive. Same as Dwarves. Never minding other settings as well. Which hedges out any development of anything that doesn't appear in Tolkien. And any suggestion of changing that is immediately shouted down.This is why you get such vociferous pushback.
The game isn’t “shackled to dead authors”, people like elves and dwarves.
Heh, it's actually really funny. I don't have to. The players do it for me. Last halfling I saw in a game was about ten years ago at the beginning of 5e. Haven't seen a gnome that I recall. My current Candlekeep campaign which just finished today (2 full years - I'm REALLY happy!) featured a warforged, a dragonborn, a tiefling, an owlfolk and a Lucidling. We're about as far from Tolkien as you can possibly get. Next campaign is a Spelljammer one, so, all the limits are off, but, so far it's a Dragonborn and an Autognome.You can create your own races, and/or provide your players with a shorter list of races that are available in your particular campaign. Wouldn't that allow you to accomplish your goal?
Weird. I just did the same search:I searched DM's Guild content for 'halfling' and 'elf'. There are 371 items compared to 699 for elf. That seems to be a fair amount.