jester47
First Post
I think most fantasy RPG maps make the assumption that there is some vegetation in places where there is not a labeled forest.
I know that the FR maps are like this. The nether mountains are covered with coniferous trees below treeline.
I think these maps are made on the assumption that a mountain range is forested or in the least vegetated. The same with the hills. I believe that forest houtlines are the borders of old growth double canopied woods. Single canopy old growth is typically too much associated with mountains to be drawn on most maps. Anything less than that is not mapworthy at all. Double canopy old growth or greater however is a serious terrain factor and is typically separate from mountains.
I would suspect that forest coverage in the mountains is not typically mapped because the mountains themselves are a more dominate terrain feature than the forest they are surrounded by. When the forest is large enough to encase mountains, but also extends far enough from the mountains to be a terrain feature in its own right, we get mountains peeking out of the forest, much like the High Forest in FR.
Thats how I handle it. Just because it is not in a forest does not mean that there are not trees there. It just means that there is not tree coverage of the variety and the thickness of a rainforest there.
Aaron.
I know that the FR maps are like this. The nether mountains are covered with coniferous trees below treeline.
I think these maps are made on the assumption that a mountain range is forested or in the least vegetated. The same with the hills. I believe that forest houtlines are the borders of old growth double canopied woods. Single canopy old growth is typically too much associated with mountains to be drawn on most maps. Anything less than that is not mapworthy at all. Double canopy old growth or greater however is a serious terrain factor and is typically separate from mountains.
I would suspect that forest coverage in the mountains is not typically mapped because the mountains themselves are a more dominate terrain feature than the forest they are surrounded by. When the forest is large enough to encase mountains, but also extends far enough from the mountains to be a terrain feature in its own right, we get mountains peeking out of the forest, much like the High Forest in FR.
Thats how I handle it. Just because it is not in a forest does not mean that there are not trees there. It just means that there is not tree coverage of the variety and the thickness of a rainforest there.
Aaron.