Jasemonkey
First Post
Yes Keith, please change the setting because a minority of people on a messageboard are whining about it. 

storyguide3 said:First off, who peed in your cereal today?
Derulbaskul said:I seem to recall that the population per square mile numbers for Eberron were about the same as Australia in the present day so it definitely can make sense.
storyguide3 said:Let us assume that before the war, Khorvaire was slightly less populated than England
By the way, I'd say the last time any major continent on Earth was that sparsely populated, we were inventing agriculture and cities, certainly not creating liiving machines and printing newspapers.
mythusmage said:Khorvaire has the resources Australia does not.
With that level of population the civilized folks should be living along rivers in city states, with the interior inhabited by roving bands of nomads.
Eberron presumes a 14th century level of technology. Twenty-six million people in a fantasy Asia is not enough to maintain that technology and the infrastructure needed to support it.
Furthermore, even if Khorvair had about 150 million people, the peoples of Khorvair don't have the infrastructure necessary for nations of the size presented on the maps. Going by the write-ups the Five Kingdoms are more like the Five Counties. The feel is small nation, not large.
As for the Last War, even with a pre-war population twice the size it is now there wouldn't have been enough people to sustain the fighting over the distances involved.
It would've been far better to place the current nations of Khorvair in the east, leaving the bulk of the continent to be developed later.
As for the war. Any event that dropped the population of a land mass the size of Asia to less than 30 million would not leave countries behind.
No.mythusmage said:Too few people. Too few countries. Multiplying both by five would help a lot.
Discuss.