• The VOIDRUNNER'S CODEX is coming! Explore new worlds, fight oppressive empires, fend off fearsome aliens, and wield deadly psionics with this comprehensive boxed set expansion for 5E and A5E!

D&D: High Fantasy vs. Sword & Sorcery

Which subgenre would you prefer to see ascendent in D&D if you had to choose?



log in or register to remove this ad

GreatLemur

Explorer
If those are my only choices, I've gotta go with sword & sorcery. The game is suffering from too much Tolkienism as it is, never mind dragging freaking C.S. Lewis into it.
 

Aus_Snow

First Post
High fantasy. It's what D&D does, and does well.

Otherwise, look elsewhere for your roleplaying fun (or get ready to house rule the poor ol' game to within an inch of its life).
 

jdrakeh said:
Honestly, you should have prefaced this poll with a collection of genre tenets as there are a great many ENWorld posters (not necessarily in this thread, as of yet) who consider any Fantasy with combat, magic, and monsters to be 'Swords & Sorcery' (which, of course, isn't the case).
confused.gif
I did. Provided Wikipedia links and everything.
 

jdrakeh

Front Range Warlock
I voted High Fantasy. At present, the only things overtly lifted from Swords& Sorcery in D&D are the Barbarian core class, some scattered magic items, and the concept of "Necromancy" as evil (so far as I can tell). The High Fantasy elements of the game (e.g., kingdoms of elves and other demi-humans, easily acessible magic, monsters in every locale, escalating character power, etc) are arguably the defining features of the game. Lose those, and you lose the core of what makes D&D the thing that it is.
 

Wulf Ratbane

Adventurer
der_kluge said:

Yeah, low fantasy for me as well, although I think D&D is really its own genre at this point.

I love how that wiki article on low fantasy includes a plug for "many d20 manufacturers, such as Skirmisher Publishing, LLC."

Ahh, yes, the paragon of d20 manufacturing, Skirmisher Publishing, whom you may have last heard of when I exlaimed, "Who the :):):):) is Skirmisher Publishing?"
 


jdrakeh said:
I voted High Fantasy. At present, the only things overtly lifted from Swords& Sorcery in D&D are the Barbarian core class, some scattered magic items, and the concept of "Necromancy" as evil (so far as I can tell).
The Necromancer was from Tolkien. "Necromancers of Naat" by Clark Ashton Smith portrayed them as fairly benign.

confused.gif


How about the whole paradigm of slogging through some underground or temple complex to find some treasure? You could make a case that Moria is the archtypical dungeon, but I think THE WHOLE POINT of D&D as it's usually played is cribbed wholesale from the plots of dozens of Howard and Leiber stories.
 



Remove ads

Top