Chris Tavares said:This actually sounds a lot like the old Spherewalker Sourcebook for Everway. A campaign supplement composed of small vignettes rather than large blocks of text. Hints instead of explicit stats.
I didn't like the game much, but that book rocked.
Khuxan said:I got your example and I think it's very cool. One thought I had, which you can take or leave: what about presenting it as a Wiki? That way someone could click on "Dacs" when reading the Akavar entry and learn about the Dacs at the same time.
Judging by your writing style, it seems like Edena of Neith would be a compatible contributor.Ryan Stoughton said:I'm working on a new project; it's called the Great Hundred. This has been in the works for a long time, but its parameters have finally been nailed down and I want to give people a chance to join me in this. This is a system-free open content project.
The Great Hundred is:
Small in scope,
Systemless,
Containing single-page
Interrelated entries
With Distinctive flavor
In a pre-agreed format and context,
Containing Capital "S" Situations
That can be explored in multiple game systems,
Is filtered through a central authority,
With veto power,
Then edited extensively, and finally
Released under the OGL listing it as 100% OGL material, then
Released again at the same moment with a Creative Commons Attribution license,
For free.
We're talking about digestible, 400 to 500 word entries hung off of a distinctive core that blends elements from many different real-world cultures and regions. To established authors: This is a 100% OGL project, so nothing here would be incompatible with later projects, and you might find the creative environment working with others stimulating.
Edit: The project has begun!
http://www.greathundred.org
Ryan Stoughton said:The project is like a campaign setting, but done as 120 single-page entries. No more, no less. No room for filler, no place for stubs.
Southeast Asian geography refers to primarily India, Vietnam, the Koreas, Thailand, Indonesia and Thailand. Think monsoon rains, bamboo forests, and so on.
"Crocodile Island" would need some development but you'd see that once you had more context. For example, we could change the crocodiles to komodo dragons for the sake of flavor, relate the demon to schemes of other spirits in the setting, have some lost treasure from a destroyed city hidden on the island, mention a legend, and so forth. You really can do a lot in 500 words, I've found.
barrowwight said:India has crocs, Thailand used to have crocs, China has an alligator. Philippine's even have a crocodile.