I'm A Banana
Potassium-Rich
So, part of what sets aside gnomes in D&D is their propensity for pranks and levity. Halflings are cheery (or shady), dwarves are jovial (or dour), elves are bemused (or distant), but part of gnomish identity is tied up in trickery, pranks, and jabs.
In fleshing out a little something I'm working on, I've come to wonder: how do these fun-loving folks process death and tragedy?
As is often the case when I'm wondering about some bit of D&D, I'm usually sure someone somewhere has thought about this in more detail than I have. Official sources seem scant -- there's a bit in the 2e Gnome & Halfling book about how they're loud and emotional about grief (makes sense), but that it passes quickly and they wind up partying after it. That can work for certain scenarios (God knows I've been to wakes that turned out that way). But what if the tragedy is dire? How does a gnome community process something immense and deep? What if it was something like the stereotypical fantasy Doomed Hometown scenario, where something big and evil killed off most of the village (and might still cast a shadow over the world)? I can imagine elves would weep about it for millennia, dwarves would carve it into histories, and halflings would remember it as a cautionary tale, but gnomes? That doesn't seem like their style to me. But it also doesn't seem like they'd be the kind to just laugh it off -- they'd probably acknowledge it somehow. Especially if the fear remains unresolved -- if that monster's still out there, if the town is in a state of chaos, how do the gnomes acknowledge the bad situation? How do they deal with stress and fear when it's ongoing?
ENWorld is a great place to harvest ideas, typically. So what's yours?
In fleshing out a little something I'm working on, I've come to wonder: how do these fun-loving folks process death and tragedy?
As is often the case when I'm wondering about some bit of D&D, I'm usually sure someone somewhere has thought about this in more detail than I have. Official sources seem scant -- there's a bit in the 2e Gnome & Halfling book about how they're loud and emotional about grief (makes sense), but that it passes quickly and they wind up partying after it. That can work for certain scenarios (God knows I've been to wakes that turned out that way). But what if the tragedy is dire? How does a gnome community process something immense and deep? What if it was something like the stereotypical fantasy Doomed Hometown scenario, where something big and evil killed off most of the village (and might still cast a shadow over the world)? I can imagine elves would weep about it for millennia, dwarves would carve it into histories, and halflings would remember it as a cautionary tale, but gnomes? That doesn't seem like their style to me. But it also doesn't seem like they'd be the kind to just laugh it off -- they'd probably acknowledge it somehow. Especially if the fear remains unresolved -- if that monster's still out there, if the town is in a state of chaos, how do the gnomes acknowledge the bad situation? How do they deal with stress and fear when it's ongoing?
ENWorld is a great place to harvest ideas, typically. So what's yours?
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