FrogReaver
The most respectful and polite poster ever
I believe I have a sufficient test to differentiate a houserule from a setting rule.
A House Rule is a modification to how the game is normally ran that deals solely (or perhaps primarily) with mechanics and is unrelated (or mostly unrelated) to fictional concerns. Example: changing the initiative system. Lowering battlemaster superiority dice to 2 at level 3.
Homebrew is creating a non-official (non-published) element for the fiction, including the needed mechanical model of it as well. For example: one of the most homebrewed areas of D&D is setting - which often consists of fiction and mechanical rules to create that reality in the game world.
A Setting Rule is a rule about the setting whether default, alternate official or homebrew. Examples may be the non-existence of Elves. The existence of clerics. The existence of guns (and their mechanics). The non-existence of magic (a bit hard in 5e). Who the gods are. Some may even have a mechanical representation and some may be fictional truths. Etc.
I see too often Setting Rules and homebrew in general gets described pejoratively as a house rule when that really isn't a very good description. IMO.
A House Rule is a modification to how the game is normally ran that deals solely (or perhaps primarily) with mechanics and is unrelated (or mostly unrelated) to fictional concerns. Example: changing the initiative system. Lowering battlemaster superiority dice to 2 at level 3.
Homebrew is creating a non-official (non-published) element for the fiction, including the needed mechanical model of it as well. For example: one of the most homebrewed areas of D&D is setting - which often consists of fiction and mechanical rules to create that reality in the game world.
A Setting Rule is a rule about the setting whether default, alternate official or homebrew. Examples may be the non-existence of Elves. The existence of clerics. The existence of guns (and their mechanics). The non-existence of magic (a bit hard in 5e). Who the gods are. Some may even have a mechanical representation and some may be fictional truths. Etc.
I see too often Setting Rules and homebrew in general gets described pejoratively as a house rule when that really isn't a very good description. IMO.