Do you find the IK hard to write adventures for?

Gundark said:
Hmm I'd have to disagree with that. Either the war or the impact of the war is described extensivly through the world book. much more than 10%. The whole war thing is something that I took out of my campaign totally, I liked the treat of the war, but not the war itself. The IK with the human focus doesn't have a D&D feel to it, maybe that's what makes it hard. I don't know, I've been trying to puit my finger on it.

Shall we do a word count? I stand by my answer that less than 10% of the material in the book deals with the war. Much more deals with the cultures and locations. Yes, every area has a paragraph or two dealing with the war, but that is to be expected, rather like reading a social studies book from the nineteen forties - the war is present, and must be alluded to.

Your thread seems to assume that any story set in the early 1940s in London would almost certainly deal with the main characters going off to be become war heroes, which is just not the case. Nor, to me, is war the 'jump in your face' adventure lead (heck, take a look at the actual, intentional, adventure leads that are in set asides in the book. Most of them do not deal with the war.)

For me it was the religious aspect that leapt out. For you it was the war. Neither occupies any where near half of the book.

The Auld Grump
 

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