James Gasik
We don't talk about Pun-Pun
Or heck, Elminster's Ecologies (though he admits, he only wrote the first book). Here's an excerpt of him talking to a wannabe adventurer about them:
A lot of D&D books from 2E especially are presented as in-universe works.So basically, because of Elminster everyone should have a chance to know anything?
Even with Elminster traveling around doing that, the odds of a given PC encountering him AND learning that specific piece of information is still next to 0.![]()
This isn't the modern world where books and libraries are common and easy to get to, and where you can find copies of the same books at all of them. It's highly unlikely that your PC has read any given book.A lot of D&D books from 2E especially are presented as in-universe works.
So if your character can read, there's a good chance they know what's in them.
D&D, especially modern D&D, sure seems like a fantasy version of the modern world to me, particularly from the adventurer's point of view.This isn't the modern world where books and libraries are common and easy to get to, and where you can find copies of the same books at all of them. It's highly unlikely that your PC has read any given book.
Given that the vast majority of people here in the real world haven't read even a tiny fraction of the books in a modern library, I'm going to say that even if what you say is true, the PCs would still be extraordinarily unlikely to have read any given book. They wouldn't be entitled to a roll to find out something about a personage on another world.D&D, especially modern D&D, sure seems like a fantasy version of the modern world to me, particularly from the adventurer's point of view.
They haven't read the seminal works of a man who is provably more awesome and important in-universe than the gods?This isn't the modern world where books and libraries are common and easy to get to, and where you can find copies of the same books at all of them. It's highly unlikely that your PC has read any given book.
Probably not. You can't check out books and bring them home and it's very unlikely that it happened prior to first level. After first level I know what they've done and where they've been.They haven't read the seminal works of a man who is provably more awesome and important in-universe than the gods?
False Equivalences are false.Okay. The cleric only has a slim chance of knowing their religion's tenets too.
I'm sorry I compared Elminster to a mere god.False Equivalences are false.