Blue Orange
Gone to Texas
From a fifties fantasy novel by an Oxford prof:
"Learn now the lore of Living Creatures!
First name the five, the free peoples:
Eldest of all, the elf-children;
Dwarf the delver, dark are his houses;
Ent the earthborn, old as mountains;
Man the mortal, master of horses;
And half-grown hobbits, the hole-dwellers."
Toss in orcs as we would nowadays and you're up to six. Only (tr)e(a)nts don't make it in, probably because they're much tougher than the others, making game balance difficult, and don't fit in houses. (Glorantha has tree-people for elves if I remember right.)
Looking at the most popular races as of 2020 (The most popular D&D races in D&D Beyond in 2020) we have human, half-elf, dragonborn, tiefling, and half-orc. So toss dragonborn and tiefling in there and you're on 8, assuming you don't count half-elves and half-orcs as separate 'races'. (They would certainly count as ancestries.)
There are, BTW, species where A can reproduce with B and B with C but not A with C, so the lack of half-elf, half-orc 'orfs' has some precedence, though I'd love to see someone stat them up.
And there's this chart someone pinched from the Book of Erotic Fantasy (chart is SFW but kind of disturbing): https://img.fireden.net/tg/image/1447/13/1447134434375.png
TVTropes has humans, elves, dwarves, orcs, and goblins as core races, with beastmen, centaurs, fairies, giants, gnomes, hobbits, lizardfolk, treants, and trolls as auxiliaries and angels, demons, dragons, elementals, and undead as monster races.
"Learn now the lore of Living Creatures!
First name the five, the free peoples:
Eldest of all, the elf-children;
Dwarf the delver, dark are his houses;
Ent the earthborn, old as mountains;
Man the mortal, master of horses;
And half-grown hobbits, the hole-dwellers."
Toss in orcs as we would nowadays and you're up to six. Only (tr)e(a)nts don't make it in, probably because they're much tougher than the others, making game balance difficult, and don't fit in houses. (Glorantha has tree-people for elves if I remember right.)
Looking at the most popular races as of 2020 (The most popular D&D races in D&D Beyond in 2020) we have human, half-elf, dragonborn, tiefling, and half-orc. So toss dragonborn and tiefling in there and you're on 8, assuming you don't count half-elves and half-orcs as separate 'races'. (They would certainly count as ancestries.)
There are, BTW, species where A can reproduce with B and B with C but not A with C, so the lack of half-elf, half-orc 'orfs' has some precedence, though I'd love to see someone stat them up.
And there's this chart someone pinched from the Book of Erotic Fantasy (chart is SFW but kind of disturbing): https://img.fireden.net/tg/image/1447/13/1447134434375.png
TVTropes has humans, elves, dwarves, orcs, and goblins as core races, with beastmen, centaurs, fairies, giants, gnomes, hobbits, lizardfolk, treants, and trolls as auxiliaries and angels, demons, dragons, elementals, and undead as monster races.
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