Hussar
Legend
RC said:I also recommend the Dictionary of Imaginary Places (http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss_b...f+imaginary+places&sprefix=dictionary+of+imag), which contains entries related to hundreds of pre-D&D fantasy works, and has a ton of entries that can be used almost wholesale when creating a D&D campaign.
Right, hundreds. Thank you for proving my point for me. Despite being able to draw on nearly a CENTURY of work, all they could do was find hundreds of works. I can find THOUSANDS of works that have been done post 1980. That, of course, being my point. Not that fantasy did not exist pre 1980. But that fantasy as a genre was a tiny niche genre (and the fact that you have less than a thousand works over the course of decades means you have a tiny niche genre) before the explosion in the 1980's.
Something I would also point out here that I thought of later, is the inclusion of Moorcock in earlier D&D. Moorcock makes a huge impact on D&D with the alignment system, which is ported almost word for word into D&D. Yet Moorcock was the China Mieville of his time. He was the guy turning the fantasy world on its ear in the sixties. People complain about angsty dual wielding drow, but, come on, that icon is a lot older. Elric was angsty before being angsty was cool.

So, yeah, I have no problems whatsoever with D&D drawing any and all sources into the game. We survived humanoid hippos with British accents flying spaceships in the Phlogiston in the game. We can survive anything.
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