Charlaquin
Goblin Queen (She/Her/Hers)
I’m not making any attempt to represent Nordic culturesYou are mischaracterizing Nordic cultures.
I’m not making any attempt to represent Nordic culturesYou are mischaracterizing Nordic cultures.
Yes, you are. You are talking about "religion".I’m not making any attempt to represent Nordic cultures
Yes, you are. You are talking about "religion".
I am talking about culture.
Vex and Vax. At least to other elves.Has any half elf since Tanis been an outsider?
I think the biggest thing to me is the fact they're torn between two worlds. They have life cycles that are more comparable to humans--yes they can live well into their second century, but still not hundreds of years like a full blooded elf. They get some of the perks of being an elf but also most of the downsides of being a human, including having to spend a whole third of every day resting.
NGL the idea of "choosing" what race you are is something that lots of mixed race people have issues with, and I really regret Tolkien didn't put this racial binary into his half-elven characters because the fantasy genre has had to carry some Silmarillion One Drop Rule henceforth.Something that could make the half-elf stand out from the bog-standard elf is to lean into the touch of divine ancestry which makes JRR Tolkien's lineage of the Half-elven special, basically make them explicitly extraplanar. A fey-touched variant could be standard, like the descendants of Lúthien who's really the first "half-elf" in the legendarium, being elven on her father's side and Maia on her mother's. She too was given "the choice" and chose a human fate. There could also be celestial and fiendish variants. Basically fold tieflings and aasimar into half-elves.
Eta: Or, conversely, make half-elves the fey-touched counterpart to the other two.
I think this is kind of undercut because what is now called Species in D&D is not just a social construct. Half-elves and half-orcs can be used as a metaphor for people of mixed race, but it's not entirely analogous. Just like how Mutants in Marvel comics are analogous to various civil rights issues, but that will always be complicated by the fact that there are, in fact, Mutants with dangerous powers that people should have a healthy concern about being in close proximity with.If it makes no sense to ask someone if they are black xor white, then the same goes for a half-elf being human xor elf.