VirgilCaine
First Post
A'koss said:Well, IMC, the "sun" is really a huge portal to the Elemental Plane of Fire that cartwheels around the world. It spins off many smaller portals in it's wake which remain as burning embers in the night sky. So even though the "constellations" are ever-changing at night, there is a distinct "trail" or cluster of portals from which sailors can navagate by at night.
I thought that the sailors navigated by the positions of specific stars and constellations?
The stars are the language and voice of the first god. He spoke, and they sprang into existence. Those who become knwoledgeable in the stars can learn to read them and catch glimpses of the past, present, and future.
Coooool. This might work well with my oh-so-original world creation premise of "It just sort of happened. Everyone explains it differently, but no one really knows how."
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As for my world (s), yeah, they're pretty much Earth. I don't really like mucking around with moons and space and stuff when players are really not going to care so much about it--they want the BLOOD to SPILL!
Except for the higher amount of carbon dioxide in the air, which explains the faster plant growth, which explains why Large/Huge sized predators can get enough to eat and why farmlands aren't quite as big as on Earth.
I had a campaign based on the thought I'd had that it's highly unlikely that an Earthlike planet would also have an Earthlike moon. Since binary systems are kind of rare.
So the moon in that campaign was actually the abandoned colony project's space station. Since it was big, round, and silvery, no one questioned it's moon-ness.
This is the same campaign where one cleric PC discovered his goddess (Brione, goddess of the dawn) was actually in control of the orbitting laser platforms. One divine intervention roll, and there was a large crater where a dungeon used to be.
Nifty! I have a world idea somewhat like this, but I want to be subtle about showing the origin/past of the world. Basically, standard D&D, but there are small hints and such that can be put together to support the idea that the world used to be entirely different.
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