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General Tabletop Discussion
D&D Older Editions
4E Halflings unrecognizable from Tolkien hobbits
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<blockquote data-quote="William Ronald" data-source="post: 3966197" data-attributes="member: 426"><p>I tend to think of species that are fairly close to humans as having about as much diversity in appearance and culture as humans. There could easily be different types of halflings in different regions, with respective cultures. If you consider the diversity in human populations and cultures, I could easily see 3e halflings, 4e halflings, and others in the same setting. (Of course, one way to surprise players is to have some exceptions to the rule - so, there may be some halfling communities that because of their history might surprise a few players. One example might be a very militant halfling community that works with a community of dwarves in fighting common enemies - to the extent that both groups have some cultural influences on each other.)</p><p></p><p>As for someone's question on the Stout Halfling, they were associated with wetlands in Tolkien's works. Also, I am surprised no one mentioned the deep halfling in 3E - which might work well as a subtype.</p><p></p><p>Remember, a culture may be more important in defining how a character approaches the world than the physical abilities and other statistics presented in a character race write up. So, in the end, halflings and anything else are what you chose to make of them at your game table.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="William Ronald, post: 3966197, member: 426"] I tend to think of species that are fairly close to humans as having about as much diversity in appearance and culture as humans. There could easily be different types of halflings in different regions, with respective cultures. If you consider the diversity in human populations and cultures, I could easily see 3e halflings, 4e halflings, and others in the same setting. (Of course, one way to surprise players is to have some exceptions to the rule - so, there may be some halfling communities that because of their history might surprise a few players. One example might be a very militant halfling community that works with a community of dwarves in fighting common enemies - to the extent that both groups have some cultural influences on each other.) As for someone's question on the Stout Halfling, they were associated with wetlands in Tolkien's works. Also, I am surprised no one mentioned the deep halfling in 3E - which might work well as a subtype. Remember, a culture may be more important in defining how a character approaches the world than the physical abilities and other statistics presented in a character race write up. So, in the end, halflings and anything else are what you chose to make of them at your game table. [/QUOTE]
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