Rob Kuntz
Hero
Do you have an "Open Wizards-Locked" spell?I say:" Open the gates on DMGuild!!!!!!!!".

Do you have an "Open Wizards-Locked" spell?I say:" Open the gates on DMGuild!!!!!!!!".
I wish I had good sir. I really wish that I had.Do you have an "Open Wizards-Locked" spell?![]()
Well, I concur. There is no fiddly, hocus-pocus formula. Even out the playing field and then differentiate with great story telling, adventures, etc. From a designer's perspective I would go much further as I've previously noted about darkening it to a Dying Earth-type, but I do know that this itself dances near the "Cliffs of Heresy." I actually believe Gary would approve of the idea, but I lack my portable Ouija board to verify that...I think the ideas that some are mooting about tweaking 5e baseline rules and assumptions to fit in with matching the ad&d feel are, respectfully ,flawed.
As the two systems are different, a level 9 character in both mean different things, conceptually in how they relate to the world. If you’re going to reboot it to work with the system, well, get it to work with the system. If a level 10 greyhawk wizard was the pinnacle of power in AD&D, well, that’s level 20 now.
So many seem to keep asking what makes it different to forgotten realms, then ignore the answer when given. It’s the feel of the setting.
Forgotten realms contains the shining city states, the forces of good are generally on the rise, those nefarious cults keep getting put down (and would have gotten away with it too if it wasn’t for those meddling Harpers shakes fists).
Greyhawk is, as has been stated, the witcher, GOT. It’s not low magic as in its low level or not there. But that’s it’s concentrated in a few powerful individuals (and by definition, as your party is exceptional, in you). It is dark and gritty, a silhouette of a dishevelled man, wounded, riding slowly against a blood red sunset as a crow caws in the fore ground.
Evil is on the rise and you’re scrabbling to make a living, or trying to make a difference. There are splashes of gonzo and surreal to lighten the tone.
The adventures themselves aren’t that different, it’s the presentation that invokes the mood and this can make all the difference.
Think early 40k before it went fully grim derp, it’s raw 80s punk aesthetic, laughing at machismo tongue in cheek, yet presenting a dark vision.
It also serves as another example of how set dressing can make the difference. The rules between it and warhammer fantasy were effectively the same for many things, it was the dressing that was difference) Yet one product did not obviate the other (and before anyone brings up end times, there were numerous, poor management decisions that led to fantasy’s retirement that don’t negate my point).
sometimes, dressing is enough.
EDIT: just want to mention, getting a like from Rob Kuntz led to a massive fanboy dance!![]()
I'd add a fourth: how much the players can interact with magic. If the pc's are all magic users, even if they're literally the only ones in the world, the narrative will feature a lot of magic, because it's focusing on people with magic. If the pc's don't use magic, it'll feature very little magic unless magic is everywhere in the setting.
This, I think, will affect the feel of the game more than the worldbuilding.
Oh my days that would be awesome.Well, I concur. There is no fiddly, hocus-pocus formula. Even out the playing field and then differentiate with great story telling, adventures, etc. From a designer's perspective I would go much further as I've previously noted about darkening it to a Dying Earth-type, but I do know that this itself dances near the "Cliffs of Heresy." I actually believe Gary would approve of the idea, but I lack my portable Ouija board to verify that...![]()
There's a big difference between "the pcs rarely interact with magic" and "the peasants rarely interact with magic."That's Frequency.
Greyhawk is a low magic frequency game because only adventurers and adventurer-adjacent people (people of high society or leadership) ever interact with magic outside of full scale war or invasion. And even then you must be over a certain level to really see much of it.
Frequency is the amount of average magic spread across the world. If your party are the only magic most people encounter, it's low magic frequency. If your party and regular folk bump into magical things frequently enough to not be a rare event, it's high magic frequency.
Well, those days of versatility are unfortunately gone. They were vanquished long before WotC acquired TSR. Greyhawk was versatile and a DM's sandbox; but with the breadwinners FR and DL, well these defined the path to GOLD: describe everything and leave no stone unturned. Greyhawk got literally crushed while caught between paradoxical and opposed philosophies (create vs. have it created for thee). Contributing to this was TSR's political war with Gary.I think I must clarify my stance on the low magic.
I should say magic is rare, but powerful. How many really high level NPC have we seen in the boxed set prior to the From the Ashes boxed set? Not many were active. Especially priests. 9th level was usually the norm. Canon Hazen was a notable exception. Most other priest stopped around level 9 to 11. How many powerful mages? Not a lot, but still a bit more numerous than clerics. Compare that to the FR and Greyhawk is far behind in availability of high level casters.
And do not get me wrong, you can always add a very high level opponent to face your PCs, that is why we play afterall, but at the same time, it this exact reason why I feel Greyhawk has so much more interesting. It was malleable enough that it could be adjusted for any campaign style. Countries were defined enough to give you an excellent idea on how to run them, but vague enough so that you could make them your own. It this versatility that I have always liked.