I think it’s fair to limit such an appendix to external inspirations.Suppose the inspiration really came from a dream the designer had. How would the designer cite this in Appendix N?
What if it isnt true that the idea came from a "classic" novel? Does the designer need to fib to sound "smart"?I think it’s fair to limit such an appendix to external inspirations.
Yeah, the value in 1979 was all about discoverability: a lot of that stuff was "deep cuts" that a younger person might not even known to be on the lookout for without that info.The Harry Potter books are important for establishing the mage as the central knightly hero.
I am still trying to understand the benefit of an Appendix N. It seems so obvious to me that this kind of "favorite sources" list works better in DnDBeyond than in any hardcopy book. For one thing, a digital list can modify, add, evolve, and specialize. Today, such a list in a book becomes almost instantly obsolete the moment a new fantasy movie becomes popculture.
Wait. Is this defacto a debate about literary canon and who decides?
Is it about sounding smart?What if it isnt true that the idea came from a "classic" novel? Does the designer need to prevaricate to sound "smart"?
Appendix NSuppose the inspiration really came from a dream the designer had. How would the designer cite this in Appendix N?
A while back, I mentioned I'd included a reference to Treasure Island in an adventure.Is it about sounding smart?
But then it becomes a narrative explaining the inspiration, rather than a two-line citation to somewhere else.Appendix N
- Any book
- Any movie
- Any TV show
- Any comic
- Your Imagination
There we go.
To be fair, that's a fine rendition.A while back, I mentioned I'd included a reference to Treasure Island in an adventure.
Player: "I've only seen the muppet version."
It's not a literary canon, nor would it need updating as new examples appear. It was always just a list of some of the literature that inspired how we got here, not necessarily where it will eventually go. And if someone wanted to pursue some of the inspirations behind the game, they were free to do so and learn something about what the designers were reading, maybe even recognize some of the influences in the game. That's all.I am still trying to understand the benefit of an Appendix N. It seems so obvious to me that this kind of "favorite sources" list works better in DnDBeyond than in any hardcopy book. For one thing, a digital list can modify, add, evolve, and specialize. Today, such a list in a book becomes almost instantly obsolete the moment a new fantasy movie becomes popculture.
Wait. Is this defacto a debate about literary canon and who decides?