The wheels don’t come off, but my little city car is not very stable at 80+ mph. But that would involve breaking the law, so it shouldn’t be doing that anyway.
Exandria is characteristic of the culture and attitudes at the time of writing, not the rules. I wouldn’t have any difficulty running a 1st edition game in Exandria.
I think you make an important point here. The trend these days is to create settings that are system-neutral and rules are setting-neutral.
So a “5e” setting would be completely system-neutral, making no reference to any rules.
And your opinion is? I believe forum rules expect you to start a conversation on any web links, not just share them, if you are starting a new topic. Could have been posted in the existing thread if you have nothing in particular to say.
Anyway, I like the LotR dialled up to 11 look of the art...
Aside from the elements that haven't aged well, Pern isn't actually as romance focused as the modern genre. People called McCaffery "The Barbara Cartland of Sci Fi" as an insult. Sometimes she did romance, but it's rarely the main focus, and I can't think of any time she sets up the...
That’s not really modern Romantacy, which is generally more sexually explicit, and would be Laurana having to choose between a moody half elf supporting character or some smoothly charming NPC (there isn’t really anyone in the original chronicles that fits the bill).
It was the rules. Gary would have disallowed it because he didn’t like non-human PCs. He wasn’t much interested in world building and settings. Greyhawk was just the generic fantasy setting where his game happened. It wasn’t until Gary stepped back from the day to day that settings that differed...
It’s been part of the game since 1st edition. Gygax actually discusses what fraction of the population have class levels. I think the figure he came up with was one in ten thousand. Third edition went so far as to add simpler and weaker classes for NPCs.