Zeromaru X
Arkhosian scholar and coffee lover
These boards are full of THACO
But Thaco is bad! He kicks puppies and steal candies from babies, and... Ah, sorry. You mean the other Thac0.
These boards are full of THACO
I remember Eberron having very similar issues, with Khorvaire being about as densely populated as Siberia. (I remember because I very vociferously argued that the numbers in the book were really problematic.)
It generally just shows that people who write game books aren't expert demographers.![]()
It is not an isolated or even the biggest example, either: huge trscks of "uncivilized land" are all over the Flannaes.Yea, that's crazy. Like you said, that's roughly 150K square miles and is about California size. You could fit 10 races, each tens of thousands strong, in that area with enough room for them to barely interact.
The premise for the plot in the FR wiki seems appealing. A pair of tieflings and a dragonborn and some fiendish pacts thrown in the mix, what could go wrong?!In fact, the most popular dragonborn character in the D&D novels is a gay character (Mehen, from the Brimstone Angels novels).
I generally avoid having such exact numbers regarding my own settings as they’re easy to mess up and usually do not matter in actual play.I remember Eberron having very similar issues, with Khorvaire being about as densely populated as Siberia. (I remember because I very vociferously argued that the numbers in the book were really problematic.)
It generally just shows that people who write game books aren't expert demographers.![]()
I mean, pretty reasonable: also works with placing large numbers of Goliaths in the Burneal Forest nearby.In my head canon, the qullan and goliaths are the same species, but the qullan are a tribe that were cursed by the Egg of Cootband under its mysterious influence.
I think the Eberron thing was that Khorvaire's physical geography scale got blown up something like x10 in scale last minute in editing before publication, not that Baker wrote kingdom size populations to be spread out across an entire vast continent.I remember Eberron having very similar issues, with Khorvaire being about as densely populated as Siberia. (I remember because I very vociferously argued that the numbers in the book were really problematic.)
It generally just shows that people who write game books aren't expert demographers.![]()
They also downscaled for later editions.I think the Eberron thing was that Khorvaire's physical geography scale got blown up something like x10 in scale last minute in editing before publication, not that Baker wrote kingdom size populations to be spread out across an entire vast continent.
Yea, they don't really matter in play, exactly. But I'm a math guy, and numbers draw images and concepts for me just like words do. Contradictory numbers hinder my ability to imagine the world and create the fiction for play.I generally avoid having such exact numbers regarding my own settings as they’re easy to mess up and usually do not matter in actual play.