D&D General So how do Half-Elfs feel different to Elfs?

Personally, I think a better question to ask is why do we want to depict the mentality of non-human species as significantly different from that of humans? There are many possible answers to that question, and they all point to different ways one ought to depict those species in order to achieve different goals.

For me, the answer is that alien mentalities can help hilight something interesting about human mentality by exaggerating it. Immortal elves are great for telling stories about grief, because their immortality burdens them with having to live to see everyone they once knew die, unless they isolate themselves from mortals completely, which can be viewed as analogous to pushing others away to avoid the pain of growing attached only to lose them. Elves can also serve as an effective representation of the time blindness experienced by folks with ADHD - an elf might struggle to manage their time because when you can live forever there is no real sense of time pressure. The temporal proximity to a future event can become abstract when the only real time-related categories you have schema for are “now” and “not now,” which can lead to things like important appointments and dates being completely forgotten.

Half-elves, on the other hand, serve a different allegorical role. Sure, they’re longer lived than humans, but in there case the purpose of that longer lifespan is not to explore stories of grief or time-blindness, but to reinforce their alienation from their peers. Too long-lived to fully empathize with other humans, too short-lived to fully empathize with other elves. As I’ve already gone on at length about in this thread, I see them as an allegory for the varied experiences of mixed-race individuals, and their lifespan and its effect on their mentality is in service to that allegory. Hence, the answer to the question of this thread of how they feel different from elves. They explore completely different facets of the human experience.
On this subject matter, if you want an incredible depiction of an elf character with this brand of alien mentality, Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End is one of the best, full stop. The second half of Delicious in Dungeon also does it quite well, in a rather different way.
 

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On this subject matter, if you want an incredible depiction of an elf character with this brand of alien mentality, Frieren: Beyond Journey’s End is one of the best, full stop. The second half of Delicious in Dungeon also does it quite well, in a rather different way.
I was definitely thinking of Frieren for a lot of these points.
 

I was definitely thinking of Frieren for a lot of these points.
Frieren and Dragon Age are the two biggest influences on me for how I like to depict elves when I DM. I don’t tend to like what multi-centenarian characters tend to do to worldbuilding, so I fiddle with my PC races’ lifespans to put them all in the range of like 80-150 years. Except elves, who I have be truly ageless, but I stole the concept of Uthenera from Dragon Age, so your elf character’s age reflects the time since they last woke up rather than the time since their birth. But since other races lifespans cap out at around 150 at the long end, elves who spend time around non-elves tend to become pretty depressed after that amount of time due to the deaths of their non-elf friends, and will usually go into a long trance shortly thereafter. But the elves who live only among other elves will often stay active for much longer periods. Frieren is a great example then of a PC who had previously only lived among other elves, and is going through her first experience of becoming close with non-elf people.
 

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