So I looked into Starfinder, expecting a default fantasy world with some names altered and technology added.
In some regards SF is exactly that and you have your thief race, your warrior race and so on.
But what strikes me as interesting is that at least according to the lore humans are not the most populous race as their homeworld is gone and they only have one space station and a few offworld colonies, most on a harsh mars like planet.
Other core races seem to be much more numerous while others have a even smaller population and would technically be a very tiny minority and extremely rare.
The most populous humanoid races are not even playable with the core rules despite nothing in their description make them seen out of line with a PC race.
Has any Starfinder product addressed the overall population breakdown of the Pact System (Both PC and other races) and how a cosmopolitan society there would look like? And how do the official adventures handle it? Do they account for some PC races being very rare while NPC races being a lot more numerous or do they place the core races everywhere by default, making them look much more widespread than they should be according to the lore?
In some regards SF is exactly that and you have your thief race, your warrior race and so on.
But what strikes me as interesting is that at least according to the lore humans are not the most populous race as their homeworld is gone and they only have one space station and a few offworld colonies, most on a harsh mars like planet.
Other core races seem to be much more numerous while others have a even smaller population and would technically be a very tiny minority and extremely rare.
The most populous humanoid races are not even playable with the core rules despite nothing in their description make them seen out of line with a PC race.
Has any Starfinder product addressed the overall population breakdown of the Pact System (Both PC and other races) and how a cosmopolitan society there would look like? And how do the official adventures handle it? Do they account for some PC races being very rare while NPC races being a lot more numerous or do they place the core races everywhere by default, making them look much more widespread than they should be according to the lore?