Mouseferatu
Hero
That could work, but I might want to see more of a difference than a soft-reboot would allow.
Dragonlance was very much a child of 80s fantasy. It embraced the spirit, the tropes, etc. Again, this is not a criticism. That's what it should have done.
But I would love to see the War of the Lance written with today's fantasy and today's D&D in mind. More shades of gray, for instance. (Not that I want the heroes to be jerks, but I'd like to see it without wizards who procaim themselves evil, for instance, or see why the humans who serve in the Dragonlords' armeis would do so.) And I'd like to see modern D&D-isms in it. A warlock character, for instance. What would drive a warlock's patron to encourage him/her to get involved in the return of the gods? What if one of the "good" races--one of the elven subtypes, for instance--was on the other side? Or what if the clerics of the "false" gods had real power? Where does it come from?
All of this could be absolutely fascinating to read or play through (or write *cough*), and if presented properly, could be done as an "alternate" view that would still leave the original and its canon as its own thing.
Dragonlance was very much a child of 80s fantasy. It embraced the spirit, the tropes, etc. Again, this is not a criticism. That's what it should have done.
But I would love to see the War of the Lance written with today's fantasy and today's D&D in mind. More shades of gray, for instance. (Not that I want the heroes to be jerks, but I'd like to see it without wizards who procaim themselves evil, for instance, or see why the humans who serve in the Dragonlords' armeis would do so.) And I'd like to see modern D&D-isms in it. A warlock character, for instance. What would drive a warlock's patron to encourage him/her to get involved in the return of the gods? What if one of the "good" races--one of the elven subtypes, for instance--was on the other side? Or what if the clerics of the "false" gods had real power? Where does it come from?
All of this could be absolutely fascinating to read or play through (or write *cough*), and if presented properly, could be done as an "alternate" view that would still leave the original and its canon as its own thing.
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