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D&D (2024) Greyhawk Confirmed. Tell Me Why.


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lkj

Hero
I remember Mearls making the point that one of Greyhawk's best features was providing enough tantalizing lore to catch your attention but leaving the vast majority of details to the individual DM. I suspect they are using it in that light. A concrete way to give new DMs a taste of how to build a campaign world while also giving a nod to nostalgia as a bonus. Done properly, it can certainly serve a new generation, who will undoubtedly take it in directions different than was done in the '70s.

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Parmandur

Book-Friend
Fading because the author is hellbent on destroying the goodwill of the very audience her books appealed most to. We were too young to notice the blatant fat phobia, low-key antisemitism, and general milquetoast pro-establishment political stance when we first read them, and were so enthralled by the world and fond childhood memories to be too critical of them once we got older. But, once she took the mask off, the spell was broken and we all collectively realized they were never really as good as we had built them up to be in our own heads.
I'm a little bit of an oddball (on multiple levels, honestly), and I fell in a. Ery particular window with Harry Potter that I didn't read it as a kid, and when it came on my radar I was at the exact age that I was too cool to read a kid's book (before I reached the point of maturuof knowing a book is juat a book). So I have little to no nostalgia. Only read the first two, pretty mediocre IMO but by that time I was in college so it was competing with Paradise Lost and Chaucer in my brainspace.

Never thought they were that good, and that they were destined to fade as the warm feels faded. Didn't expect Rowling to actively attack the nostalgia, though.
 

Parmandur

Book-Friend
I remember Mearls making the point that one of Greyhawk's best features was providing enough tantalizing lore to catch your attention but leaving the vast majority of details to the individual DM. I suspect they are using it in that light. A concrete way to give new DMs a taste of how to build a campaign world while also giving a nod to nostalgia as a bonus. Done properly, it can certainly serve a new generation, who will undoubtedly take it in directions different than was done in the '70s.

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That's how we did in Colllege wirh 3E Greyhawk.
 

Scribe

Legend
Greyhawk is a world inspired by Gygax's love of sword and sorcery pulp fantasy and hard coded medievalism. I just don't understand how that is going to appeal to generations raised on Avatar, Harry Potter and Steven Universe.

I think for the majority of new players, it won't and doesn't matter. I think it's Wizards trying to maintain that nostalgic hook for the vocal online base and ride that fence a bit longer.
 



Charlaquin

Goblin Queen (She/Her/Hers)
I'm a little bit of an oddball (on multiple levels, honestly), and I fell in a. Ery particular window with Harry Potter that I didn't read it as a kid, and when it came on my radar I was at the exact age that I was too cool to read a kid's book (before I reached the point of maturuof knowing a book is juat a book). So I have little to no nostalgia. Only read the first two, pretty mediocre IMO but by that time I was in college so it was competing with Paradise Lost and Chaucer in my brainspace.
To be fair, the books were written to mature with the audience. The first two are very much just your average fantasy kids’ books, the third and fourth get a bit darker, and the fifth onward are young adult novels. I happened to be in the perfect age group to fall in exactly the right target age for each book as it came out. But, yeah, they’re really pretty mediocre in terms of both writing quality and themes. They were just marketed brilliantly.
 

Parmandur

Book-Friend
To be fair, the books were written to mature with the audience. The first two are very much just your average fantasy kids’ books, the third and fourth get a bit darker, and the fifth onward are young adult novels. I happened to be in the perfect age group to fall in exactly the right target age for each book as it came out. But, yeah, they’re really pretty mediocre in terms of both writing quality and themes. They were just marketed brilliantly.
Really an astonishing perfect pop culture storm: but the foundation was built on sand.
 

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