Whizbang Dustyboots said:Scale back on the assitude, please.
The medieval stuff is what's been depicted in FR art almost exclusively, except for a handful of selected novels and sourcebooks. The non-Faerun sections of the Forgotten Realms are less popular than the core region and have received only a little attention this time around.
At the present time, FR is a fantasy medieval setting as far as most consumers are concerned, much like Greyhawk mostly is. Yes, both settings have other stuff around the edges, but it's not the dominant flavor of the setting and unless one or both settings has a 90 degree turn on how it's developed for the rest of this edition -- "All Maztica, all the time!" -- they would be competing in the same space.
I wasn't giving him any sort of attitude. It was an honest and sincere question. Maybe he's a really busy guy and hasn't read much about FR, I don't know how he schedules his time, honestly.
But being in the position he is in, I assume he knows enough about FR to realize it's not exactly, nor entirely, a medieval-setting game.
And the thing is people who learn about FR by reading it will come to realize it's very different from GH. If they're told by someone else, that person should be able to show and tell them the big differences. I do all the time with new players when explaining what a campaign setting is and the different types of settings out there. When talking about GH and FR, there's more than just a subtle difference.
What I have problems with is explaining the differences between FR and Eberron. Those two confuse new people only because they're both described as "highly magical" and I get a lot of quirked eyebrows when I tell them Eberron is more "pulp-noir" (then I have to explain what that term means) and then they say something like "Oh, why can't you have that same style in FR?"
So, yeah, if anything Eberron and FR are rather hard to differentiate in terms than GH and FR. With Eberron, I just open a book and show them pictures and then show them FR pictures to compare, then they understand the setting differences
Last edited: