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5e blog idea I can’t stop thinking about
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<blockquote data-quote="Ry" data-source="post: 9264608" data-attributes="member: 8314"><p>I have an idea that I just can’t leave alone or get out of my head, so I figure I need to blog about it. This is a baroque concept for a small audience, so I’m hoping that I can get some advice on where to post / what to do with it.</p><p></p><p>5e is this incredible engine for playing in so many fantasy worlds. But not all of those worlds use all of the core rules.</p><p></p><p>For example, some games come to a satisfying conclusion by level 10. Their DMs don't need to work out what happens in a world with Pit Fiends, reliable teleportation, true resurrection, and <em>Wish</em> in order to preserve verisimilitude. Then there’s the games where no one makes clerics, and time-strapped DMs can drastically simplify the gods. What I’m saying is entire game settings can be conceived with large swaths of rules stripped out. Games in those settings keep to their own internal logic.</p><p></p><p>Think of the rules are like layers of the onion. The whole onion is 5e, the version encoded in the 5E CC SRD. Then, each layer below that is a subset of D&D's rules, i.e. removing high levels, removing a certain class, and so on. As we go through these levels we find a slightly different universe that has different implicit assumptions.</p><p></p><p>The blog would be like performance art Grognardia; a history of the same 5e emerging from an alternate reality, where I can explore the games within the game, all of which share a tiny core. In that core, 1e was a game that just had rules to make one shot dungeons for first level fighters, and successive editions added levels, and classes, monsters, and spells until we got to 5e, which had everything. Settings for the different editions will vary dramatically.</p><p></p><p>At its heart the idea is a celebration of an open licensed 5e, because we can use all those subset games if we want to.</p><p></p><p>If this sounds crazy, that's okay. I'm primarily looking for advice on where I could put it so a few people could find it, rather than just firing it into the void.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ry, post: 9264608, member: 8314"] I have an idea that I just can’t leave alone or get out of my head, so I figure I need to blog about it. This is a baroque concept for a small audience, so I’m hoping that I can get some advice on where to post / what to do with it. 5e is this incredible engine for playing in so many fantasy worlds. But not all of those worlds use all of the core rules. For example, some games come to a satisfying conclusion by level 10. Their DMs don't need to work out what happens in a world with Pit Fiends, reliable teleportation, true resurrection, and [I]Wish[/I] in order to preserve verisimilitude. Then there’s the games where no one makes clerics, and time-strapped DMs can drastically simplify the gods. What I’m saying is entire game settings can be conceived with large swaths of rules stripped out. Games in those settings keep to their own internal logic. Think of the rules are like layers of the onion. The whole onion is 5e, the version encoded in the 5E CC SRD. Then, each layer below that is a subset of D&D's rules, i.e. removing high levels, removing a certain class, and so on. As we go through these levels we find a slightly different universe that has different implicit assumptions. The blog would be like performance art Grognardia; a history of the same 5e emerging from an alternate reality, where I can explore the games within the game, all of which share a tiny core. In that core, 1e was a game that just had rules to make one shot dungeons for first level fighters, and successive editions added levels, and classes, monsters, and spells until we got to 5e, which had everything. Settings for the different editions will vary dramatically. At its heart the idea is a celebration of an open licensed 5e, because we can use all those subset games if we want to. If this sounds crazy, that's okay. I'm primarily looking for advice on where I could put it so a few people could find it, rather than just firing it into the void. [/QUOTE]
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