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Settings played in D&D: cause or effect?
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<blockquote data-quote="Lanefan" data-source="post: 6765074" data-attributes="member: 29398"><p>FR and Greyhawk have the big advantage of being generic enough that just about anyone can shoehorn their own setting into them without too much trouble. (then again, so is Mystara/Known World; odd that more people don't use these)</p><p></p><p>Dark Sun, Planescape, Eberron, Ravenloft and a bunch of others are more specialized and thus will mostly attract only those who are interested in their particular genre. Also, it's much more possible to chuck a genre campaign into a generic setting (e.g. a gothic horror campaign in the FR) than to take a genre setting and try to make it something it isn't. All told, no big surprises here.</p><p></p><p>Even though they're more work, homebrews are attractive mostly because a) DMs can put their own ideas into practice and b) using one kicks established-setting canon lawyers to the curb.</p><p></p><p>For my own part my big campaigns have been in order: full homebrew, FR-based homebrew, and full homebrew.</p><p></p><p>Lan-"are homebrew campaigns the D&D equivalent of moonshine?"-efan</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lanefan, post: 6765074, member: 29398"] FR and Greyhawk have the big advantage of being generic enough that just about anyone can shoehorn their own setting into them without too much trouble. (then again, so is Mystara/Known World; odd that more people don't use these) Dark Sun, Planescape, Eberron, Ravenloft and a bunch of others are more specialized and thus will mostly attract only those who are interested in their particular genre. Also, it's much more possible to chuck a genre campaign into a generic setting (e.g. a gothic horror campaign in the FR) than to take a genre setting and try to make it something it isn't. All told, no big surprises here. Even though they're more work, homebrews are attractive mostly because a) DMs can put their own ideas into practice and b) using one kicks established-setting canon lawyers to the curb. For my own part my big campaigns have been in order: full homebrew, FR-based homebrew, and full homebrew. Lan-"are homebrew campaigns the D&D equivalent of moonshine?"-efan [/QUOTE]
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