D&D 5E Help me design Fantasy Americas D&D (+)


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Ixal

Hero
Townsends is a website with all kinds of archaic Americana, and they have a YouTube channel where they actually cook recipes from American history.

Townsends
18th century is a bit too late for what the OP described.

Is there a list which plants were native to the Americas and which did not exist there (for food and other agriculture)?
 

Dannyalcatraz

Schmoderator
Staff member
Supporter
18th century is a bit too late for what the OP described.

Is there a list which plants were native to the Americas and which did not exist there (for food and other agriculture)?
Some of their stuff goes back a little further, but not much. Still, tech didn’t change that quickly back then, so it at least gives you an inkling.

As for new world plants, here’s one list of foods originating in the America:

(Since it isn’t edible, tobacco isn’t on that list.)

The wiki is surprisingly broad:

A food historian quoted in that article points out about pre-1492 Old World cuisine:
If we deconstruct that these foods were inherently native, then that means that the Italians didn't have the tomato, the Irish didn't have the potato, half the British National Dish—Fish and Chips—didn't exist. The Russians didn't have the potato, nor did they have vodka from the potato. There were no chiles in any Asian cuisine anywhere in the world, nor were there any chiles in any East Indian cuisine dishes, including curries. And the French had no confection using either vanilla or chocolate. So the Old World was a completely different place.
 
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Eltab

Lord of the Hidden Layer
Source to mine for ideas: Killing Crazy Horse by Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard. A few possibilities:
  • The Comanche warrior culture that thinks other peoples do work so we can take what we want from them.
  • IRL Comanche were light cavalry raiders. What would a heavy infantry oriented warrior culture become?
  • Evil spirit(s) haunts the area near Wounded Knee, driving people who normally have discipline and self-control into frenzies of barbaric deeds.
  • Cochise, a tactical genius who raids multiple foes but never gets ganged up on by them.
  • The extermination of the buffalo, as re-told in myth and legend for several generations, becomes something above the mundane - a time when the world moved from one Age into another Age.
 

Northern Phoenix

Adventurer
If you want "America" as in "The United States Of", rather than pre-colonial america, Monsters of Murka Campaign Setting has got you covered!


This delightfully satirical yet at times also charmingly earnest DnDification of the mythologized America of folklore takes you for a wild ride indeed across 214-pages of fun for both players and DMs
 

Ixal

Hero
Source to mine for ideas: Killing Crazy Horse by Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard. A few possibilities:
  • The Comanche warrior culture that thinks other peoples do work so we can take what we want from them.
  • IRL Comanche were light cavalry raiders. What would a heavy infantry oriented warrior culture become?
  • Evil spirit(s) haunts the area near Wounded Knee, driving people who normally have discipline and self-control into frenzies of barbaric deeds.
  • Cochise, a tactical genius who raids multiple foes but never gets ganged up on by them.
  • The extermination of the buffalo, as re-told in myth and legend for several generations, becomes something above the mundane - a time when the world moved from one Age into another Age.
Raiding cultures needs a way to strike fast and carry the loot. For the Comanche they used horses and Vikings used ships. So a "heavy infantry warrior culture" would either need a mode of transportation or drop the raiding part and become more like the Romans with their legions.
 

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