JEB
Legend
Personally, I wouldn't count anything DM Guild that wasn't an official Wizards product. (Also, DM Guild only officially permits users to use settings that already appeared in 5E in official publications, and not even all of those, so I don't know that it would add much.)DMs Guild (@Parmandur)
I’ll look into this, although it will have to be for version 3.0.
There were 2E Rokugan products? Huh. I only knew about the 3E ones.Rokugan (@JEB)
Done. I only included what was actually published for D&D.
Honestly, I think you're better erring on the side of distinguishing sub-settings, since it's more informative than not distinguishing them.THE BIGGER ISSUE…Sub-settings, expansions, distinct settings etc (@JEB, @Stormonu, etc)
Here’s how I did it for 2.0: it depends upon how it was first published. For the Forgotten Realms, Kara-Tur and Al-Qadim were first published as distinct settings and only later incorporated into the FR. The Horde and Maztica were considered part of the FR from the beginning.
Similarly with Taladas – it was part of Krynn from its inception, so I’m considering it as a “major expansion,” not a distinct setting.
This is also why Blackmoor has its own row – it was only subsumed by Greyhawk and Mystara later on. And, of course, regained its freedom later on.
This is also why, after thinking again upon it, I’m going to keep all the various sub-settings of Mystara within the Mystara row – they were all initially published within that setting – at least Hollow World, Savage Coast, Red Steel, etc. That said, Thunder Rift was initially meant to be setting-neutral, even though it was envisioned by the creators as part of Mystara. But I’m giving it its own line under Mystara ala Al-Qadim under the FR.
Admittedly, Hollow World and Masque of the Red Death are a bit tricky as they are both essentially distinct from the rest of the setting. But I’m going to stick with the basic idea of sub-settings: If it was initially conceived of as part of the setting, then it is subsumed in that row; if it was later added on, it gets its own row. So HW is part of Mystara, and Masque part of Ravenloft.
I would not include Wheel of Time as a D&D setting, specifically because it wasn't designed as a D&D setting. I mean, Star Wars or Call of Cthulhu d20 have just about as much right to be called a D&D setting as Wheel of Time does...ADDENDUM – Other Publishers/Wheel of Time
I’ve also added Wheel of Time, even though it isn’t technically D&D but d20. Still, it is close enough that I think it deserves mention. But I might remove it again later.
I considered suggesting that as well, but they're not really a coherent "Fantasy Earth" setting, just a series of supplements with no obvious interconnections. (Though to be fair, I do recall the supplementary material for 2E's Chronomancer lumping them together.)One I just thought of that gets overlooked because of its mundaneness - Fantasy Historical Earth.
That would cover the green Historical books of 2E, possibly Gothic Earth, the early Deities and Demigods “real world“ religions and King Arthur stories, and I believe at least one D&D module. And while you’re not including it, there were several Dragon magazine articles that would be Fantasy Earth gazetteers, as well as the various articles about character stats for historical figures and the like.