I don't see that as mattering. Enough games use the produced settings to make the sale of them worthwhile. That's a LOT of games. Enough to warrant the big four having their gods take 2 pages.Most games are homebrew...?
One might make yhst case, but WotC decided otherwise...and they see the ones with data on what people are doing, etc.I don't see that as mattering. Enough games use the produced settings to make the sale of them worthwhile. That's a LOT of games. Enough to warrant the big four having their gods take 2 pages.
OP updated!Feel the thread should be updated with a better picture of the ToC. This is from the Beyond Marketplace.
Whereas I can see the Itialian one. I mean come on, just cause I am in Europe.Feel the thread should be updated with a better picture of the ToC. This is from the Beyond Marketplace.
I agree that those pages too should be in the DMG...I will go out on a limb and agree (to some extent) with Maxperson. While I think you can play a cleric without the name of a god, I think a list of gods would have been far more useful for players than a description of the multiverse. Most campaigns won't visit the outer planes
and then you learn that the setting you play in is Dragonlance and there is no Pelor...No. When you decide to play a cleric you decide, "I'm going to be a cleric of Pelor and take the life domain as my subclass."
that still does not help with homebrew, there simply is no way to account for all settings, so they might as well not bother with any. It's not like you cannot ask your DM during char creationIt would take a page or two to put in the 4 most commonly played settings. FR, Greyhawk, Eberron and Dragonlance. If the game isn't homebrew, it's going to be one of those 4 the vast majority of the time.
arguable an immortal being also just isOnly living beings are immortal. A cosmic force is not mortal or immortal. It just is. Like gravity.
Plus, and WotC is aware of this...all the possible D&D formal pantheons are on the internet.and then you learn that the setting you play in is Dragonlance and there is no Pelor...
that still does not help with homebrew, there simply is no way to account for all settings, so they might as well not bother with any. It's not like you cannot ask your DM during char creation