D&D General In Heaven the Cooks are French... (Setting Thoughts)

The window dressing is nice and all, but honestly at this point im ready to stick a fork in the tropes because they are done. I care less about who smokes pipeweed, or who lives in tree huts, etc.. I am more concerned with sociopolitical situations and conflicts. The types of things that are rife with obstacles and complications to adventures. I also mean specific regional things that are not general. No "all dorfs hate orcs" type of stuff. More like a city where relations between elves and halflings are cold because of a century old conflict nobody remembers, yet stays hot in the general discourse all the same. That kinda thing.
 

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The window dressing is nice and all, but honestly at this point im ready to stick a fork in the tropes because they are done. I care less about who smokes pipeweed, or who lives in tree huts, etc.. I am more concerned with sociopolitical situations and conflicts. The types of things that are rife with obstacles and complications to adventures. I also mean specific regional things that are not general. No "all dorfs hate orcs" type of stuff. More like a city where relations between elves and halflings are cold because of a century old conflict nobody remembers, yet stays hot in the general discourse all the same. That kinda thing.
who lives in tree huts and who smokes pipe weed can affect sociopolitical situations very fast as those are economic things which tent to effect people often
 

who lives in tree huts and who smokes pipe weed can affect sociopolitical situations very fast as those are economic things which tent to effect people often
Ok, but what are the specifics? Does it have to be tree huts and pipeweed? Can we just forgo them, or include them and not care if its trope representation? Im just not interested in shuffling the tropes, or subverting them.
 

Ok, but what are the specifics? Does it have to be tree huts and pipeweed? Can we just forgo them, or include them and not care if its trope representation? Im just not interested in shuffling the tropes, or subverting them.
specifics depend on plot and what you want or players want or need to deal with.

sooner or later you will end up shuffling or subverting tropes by pure probability.
I personally seek to make better definitive versions of some options and create new icons
 

The Pipeweed thing was more about how incredibly global and historically bizarre most campaign settings are (I.E. written as if they're 1200s Europe with goods from all over the world and from time periods ranging from 2500BCE to 1920CE) and yet how they're treated as deeply eurocentric and white AF.

'Cause the second you add in a black person (first known example sometime around 300kBCE) or a trans person (first known example 2500BCE) it's "Unrealistic".

To kinda highlight how jumbled and, frankly, -weird- D&D settings tend to be, even before you get into magic and monsters.
 

There's something I remember Robert Jordan saying in an interview, but may be apocryphal. It was something like 'I find it hard to design a world without any prejudices, but I really didn't want frank racism. Instead, people's dress, language, and customs formed a culture, and other cultures could admire, ignore, or hold in disdain that culture. It didn't matter what your skin or hair looked like.'
 

nvm
 

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The Pipeweed thing was more about how incredibly global and historically bizarre most campaign settings are (I.E. written as if they're 1200s Europe with goods from all over the world and from time periods ranging from 2500BCE to 1920CE) and yet how they're treated as deeply eurocentric and white AF.

'Cause the second you add in a black person (first known example sometime around 300kBCE) or a trans person (first known example 2500BCE) it's "Unrealistic".

To kinda highlight how jumbled and, frankly, -weird- D&D settings tend to be, even before you get into magic and monsters.

Urusla Le Guin criticized the Earthsea Miniseries as having ruined her books and in particular the whitewashing of the characters in the lead roles. She said it was a deliberate choice to make most of the peoples of Earthsea darkskinned - Ged is red-brown and Vetch black (both roles were played by white actors), ironically the only 'white-skinned' character Tenar was played by half-chinese Kristin Kreuk.

On the issue of Pipeweed and Potatoes however I'm not sure its really as bizarre as you imply, the worlds of fantasy are not Earth and so we arent constrained by historic species distributions. Having a herb growing in Europe-analogue that can be smoked as a recreational relaxant is just decoration not cultural anachronism specifically because Fantasy-world isnt a historically accurate recreation of Europe - just an inspired simulation. This discussion reminds me of the Fantasy Spectacles debate from last year or earlier debates about Wheelchairs, Pirate Ships and Rapiers.

Issues of representation - racial, gender, disability and cultural appropriation are important but I'm not so certain that kitchen sink design of DnD Fantasy-world is a molehill worth dying on

to quote Le Guin "I am intensely conscious of the risk of cultural or ethnic imperialism—...In a totally invented fantasy world, or in a far-future science fiction setting, in the rainbow world we can imagine, this risk is mitigated. That’s the beauty of science fiction and fantasy—freedom of invention. But with all freedom comes responsibility"
 
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Ok, the door-to-door proselytizing Drow got me.
I once ran a dwarf cleric who was a proselytizing preacher of Moradin. He would often ask people (many of them non-dwarves) if "they have considered a close, personal commitment to Moradin?" And provided flyers. One player described him as "a Jehovah's Witness with a Warhammer". He was a blast to play.
 

On topic: I think a lot of the generic panache comes from a desire to replicate the tone of different types of stories rather than actual setting implications. For example, swashbuckling fantasy to most people is The Three Musketeers or various pirate tales, so of course adventures themed around that are going to have rapiers and galleons and flintlock pistols, while gothic horror is going to resemble the 18th and 19th century with detectives and mad scientists and seances. And it makes no sense they are next to 14th century Camelot with knights and jousts and stuff. Except that people like variety and going from fighting pirates to investigating a vampire's castle to thwarting an evil knight because it is fun.

Which is why I cannot be upset anymore about versimillitude anymore. D&D is where Lancelot, Conan, Harry Potter and Ang all go beat up Court Dracula and his army of Uruk-hai. If you're not crossing several streams, what are you even doing?
 

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