Willie the Duck
Hero
Hmm. In my experience, the obvious stuff (FTL travel, magic making/destroying matter, no guns alongside plate, artificial gravity, squared-cubed laws and giant fantasy creatures, open-topped castles in a world with griffons, etc.) usually gets called out as part of those "save where noted." It's often subtler stuff or downstream consequences that get missed.
Stuff like implied climatological consequences. Huge mountain ranges won't create a desert on one side. Rivers will flow in whatever direction was needed at the time (and of course comprised of sixty-degree turns if the world was initially constructed on a hex map). And so on.
Or a sci fi setting where slower-than-light travel is done with perfected cryo sleep. The crew will get out of their sleep pods and go to the galley or cargo hold and pull out something that by all rights would have decayed/discharged in the intervening years and it is perfectly ready to use.
Generally speaking, I don't have a problem with a lot of these. I get it. It's conservation of story prompts, and generally we (my groups at least) are looking for 'just like the world you know, but with ________' and not the perfectly realistic and exhaustively detailed rebuild of the world with all the holes filled in. Every once in a while, though, there's a 'you did not think this through' moment that jars everyone.
Stuff like implied climatological consequences. Huge mountain ranges won't create a desert on one side. Rivers will flow in whatever direction was needed at the time (and of course comprised of sixty-degree turns if the world was initially constructed on a hex map). And so on.
Or a sci fi setting where slower-than-light travel is done with perfected cryo sleep. The crew will get out of their sleep pods and go to the galley or cargo hold and pull out something that by all rights would have decayed/discharged in the intervening years and it is perfectly ready to use.
Generally speaking, I don't have a problem with a lot of these. I get it. It's conservation of story prompts, and generally we (my groups at least) are looking for 'just like the world you know, but with ________' and not the perfectly realistic and exhaustively detailed rebuild of the world with all the holes filled in. Every once in a while, though, there's a 'you did not think this through' moment that jars everyone.