Menu
News
All News
Dungeons & Dragons
Level Up: Advanced 5th Edition
Pathfinder
Starfinder
Warhammer
2d20 System
Year Zero Engine
Industry News
Reviews
Dragon Reflections
White Dwarf Reflections
Columns
Weekly Digests
Weekly News Digest
Freebies, Sales & Bundles
RPG Print News
RPG Crowdfunding News
Game Content
ENterplanetary DimENsions
Mythological Figures
Opinion
Worlds of Design
Peregrine's Nest
RPG Evolution
Other Columns
From the Freelancing Frontline
Monster ENcyclopedia
WotC/TSR Alumni Look Back
4 Hours w/RSD (Ryan Dancey)
The Road to 3E (Jonathan Tweet)
Greenwood's Realms (Ed Greenwood)
Drawmij's TSR (Jim Ward)
Community
Forums & Topics
Forum List
Latest Posts
Forum list
*Dungeons & Dragons
Level Up: Advanced 5th Edition
D&D Older Editions
*TTRPGs General
*Pathfinder & Starfinder
EN Publishing
*Geek Talk & Media
Search forums
Chat/Discord
Resources
Wiki
Pages
Latest activity
Media
New media
New comments
Search media
Downloads
Latest reviews
Search resources
EN Publishing
Store
EN5ider
Adventures in ZEITGEIST
Awfully Cheerful Engine
What's OLD is NEW
Judge Dredd & The Worlds Of 2000AD
War of the Burning Sky
Level Up: Advanced 5E
Events & Releases
Upcoming Events
Private Events
Featured Events
Socials!
EN Publishing
Twitter
BlueSky
Facebook
Instagram
EN World
BlueSky
YouTube
Facebook
Twitter
Twitch
Podcast
Features
Top 5 RPGs Compiled Charts 2004-Present
Adventure Game Industry Market Research Summary (RPGs) V1.0
Ryan Dancey: Acquiring TSR
Q&A With Gary Gygax
D&D Rules FAQs
TSR, WotC, & Paizo: A Comparative History
D&D Pronunciation Guide
Million Dollar TTRPG Kickstarters
Tabletop RPG Podcast Hall of Fame
Eric Noah's Unofficial D&D 3rd Edition News
D&D in the Mainstream
D&D & RPG History
About Morrus
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
Forums & Topics
Forum List
Latest Posts
Forum list
*Dungeons & Dragons
Level Up: Advanced 5th Edition
D&D Older Editions
*TTRPGs General
*Pathfinder & Starfinder
EN Publishing
*Geek Talk & Media
Search forums
Chat/Discord
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
Community
General Tabletop Discussion
*Pathfinder & Starfinder
What do Drow look like?
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="Yaarel" data-source="post: 6287064" data-attributes="member: 58172"><p><strong>THE ESSENCE OF THE APPEARANCE OF THE DROW</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p>Currently the poll has over 50 votes, so the results are probably stabilizing and representative. The essential characteristics of Drow appearance are:</p><p></p><p>SKIN: pure black or dark color.</p><p>HAIR: pure white or pale color.</p><p>MALE FACIAL HAIR: none.</p><p>EARS: pointed but subtle (compare Tolkien).</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Absent from the poll but probably essential:</p><p></p><p>PHYSIQUE: slim, physically fit, and sexy.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Alongside these four or five physical characteristics, the Drow allow a wide variety of possible appearances. Even the essential characteristics allow for some leeway.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>VARIATION</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p>Drow appearances can vary depending on the setting. (24/51). In some settings, appearances vary depending on the region. (15/51). But in other settings, Drow are homogenous regardless of location. (12/51). Variations of Drow characteristics might correspond to individuals, family houses, subcultures, ethnicity, regions, planar contacts, or separate subraces.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>SKIN</strong></p><p></p><p>Drow overwhelmingly exhibit skin that is blackish, pure black or a dark color. (45/68). Even so, as much as one third of the Drow in a particular setting might exhibit paler shades of colors. But even a lighter Drow tends to approximate a darker Human.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Interpreting the votes, consider. The defining majority of Drow have black skin with gray red-purple highlights. This particular picture of the obsidian seems to represent the typical skin coloring and texture of a Drow.</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH]61191[/ATTACH]</p><p></p><p>Now these softer reddish-purplish highlights can range into warmer hues or cooler hues, or colorless grays. This grayish red-purple obsidian is somewhere in the middle of the possibilities. The cooler highlights are bluer hues, such as grayish blue-purple shades of indigo. The warmer highlights are oranger hues, such as grayish red-orange shades of copper. The coloring can be less intense reaching into grays with fainter hints of red-purple, even colorless black-and-white.</p><p></p><p></p><p>As much as a 20% of the Drow in a setting may exhibit a lighter skin color, mostly like darker Human pigmentations, but also as much as 10% may be like lighter Human pigmentations, and rare albinos may exist. Together, these 30% with lighter shades can range from gray to a dusky red-purple, with cooler or warmer possibilities.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Settings might emphasize grayer and cooler Drow skins because these are Non-Human. But some settings might use the warmer coppery skin to emphasize the Human-like quality. For example, Forgotten Realms appears to assign the warmer Drow tones to the Drow ancestral subrace that is usually Good, in order to subvert the unintentional trope that dark skin equates to evil. In this case, the Human-like dark skin is inherently Good.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Interestingly, the luster of the Drow skin can range from glossy and gemmy to matte and soft. The range leans toward matte, 54% But for the sake of illustrations, the darker skin might tend to be glossier so soft highlights and sharp gleams can help articulate facial shapes. Lighter shades can be glossy as well, resembling ‘glowing’ dancers and perspiring athletes. Originally, skin luster appeared gender-divided, but came to be equally likely for either gender.</p><p></p><p>Note, the mythologically accurate ‘Dark Elf’ has pale sunless skin and black hair. A setting can describe a ‘Dark Elf’ (or ‘Black Elf’, ‘Night Elf’, etcetera) with almost any complexion and remain within recognizable tropes. However, a ‘Drow’ must have typically blackish skin and whitish hair, or else ceases to be recognizable as a ‘Drow’.</p><p></p><p></p><p>A setting can portray the Drow with a significant degree of skin variation. Nevertheless, the blackish skin needs to remain the majority even for groups that can have lighter shades.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>HAIR</strong></p><p></p><p></p><p>Drow hair is whitish, either pure white or a pale color, 62%. (49/79). Even so, as much as one fourth of the Drow in a setting might have somewhat darker shades of hair. Mostly these darker shades are paler shades of gray, such as silver, 18%. However hair can sometimes be very dark or even black, 9%.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Surprisingly, the essence of Drow hair is whitish, but also colorless. It is shades of gray. Despite strong official support for warm colors, including yellowish (blond) and reddish, the voter response to colorful hair is unenthusiastic. Currently the possibility of dark hair, which has little support, is only about 9% (6/73). But this appears more acceptable than either a cooler blue-purple color 6% (5/73) or a warmer red-orange color 5% (4/73).</p><p></p><p>In other words, Drow hair is commonly white, uncommonly gray, and rarely black. But the hair generally lacks color regardless of the shade of gray. Consider about 11% of hair can show some color. But even this tends toward paler hints of color. Drow is about 89% colorless.</p><p></p><p></p><p>The player expectations for white hair colorless hair is so strong, settings should probably always assume it. For example in the Forgotten Realms setting, the ancestral subrace has Human-like warm dark skin with black hair. Because of expectations, this subrace feels dissonant and is difficult to perceive it as relating to the Drow. Of course, this is the point, the ‘curse’ of the Drow has been removed. Nevertheless, the subrace as an ‘ancestor’ would be more recognizable as Drow, and perhaps more relevant and interesting, if more typically exhibiting whitish hair with the Human-like warm dark skin. If so, the warm dark skin of this ‘Good Drow’ might connote white-hair elders among darker skin. It is possible to have a separate Dark Elf subraces, where one has light skin and dark hair, but then it lacks a direct link to the ‘Drow’.</p><p></p><p>Relatedly, expectations for colorless hair suggest discontinuing official descriptions of Drow with blond or reddish hair. Such colors may exist among rare individuals, but they dont typify the Drow.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Since Drow hair tends toward colorless, the presence of any intense color might evidence a Non-Drow bloodline.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Likely, the luster of the whitish hair is glossy with a pearly or silvery sheen, or matte and dull. The probability leans slightly toward matte, like skin luster does. Descriptions imply glossy hair is more prestigious.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Drow males typically lack any facial hair, 71%. (40/59). As much as a third of males might grow some facial hair, ranging from pale peach fuzz to wisps of sideburns, a soft thin mustache, or goatee, with a full beard becoming increasingly impossible. It is unclear if facial hair might be prestigious or embarassing with Drow known to shave - or prestidigitate.</p><p></p><p></p><p>In sum, Drow hair is white. Less than a fourth have non-white hair. Even the non-white hair tends to be pale gray silver, and is uncommon. Dark shades of gray hair are unusual. Black hair seems rare. Regardless of shade, Drow hair tends strongly toward colorless shades of gray. Generally, any coloring tends to appears as hints of color in the highlights of white or silvery gray.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>EYE COLOR</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p>The Drow has eyes, of course. But a setting has freedom to portray the eyes in a diversity of ways. Even so, Drow eyes are typically colorful.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Eye color can be any hue of the spectrum: the warm hues of red, orange, or yellow, and the cool hues of purple, blue, and green. Which hues are common and which ones are uncommon depend on the setting. For example, in old-school Greyhawk, yellow-orange eyes are typical. But in Forgotten Realms, yellow-orange eyes are rare. Even descriptions for the same setting can conflict, thus encouraging the interpretation of house or regional tendencies.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Drow eyes are twice as likely to be pure white (21%) as pure black (11%), while the defining majority somewhere in between. Eyes are unlikely to be grayish (6%). Thus Drow eyes tend strongly toward colorful. (62%). The color is vivid but less likely to be unnaturally bright. The color may be ‘exotic’ but feels natural, and tends to lean toward paler and softer (such as lavender), in contrast to the blackish skin. There is an interesting contrast between colorful eyes, colorless hair, and skin tending toward highlights somewhere in between.</p><p></p><p></p><p>The defining majority of Drow have colorful eyes. Some prominant official settings describe the eyes warm and fiery (red or yellow-orange) or else whitish (white or pale). If these two are the only options, player expectation leans toward the vivid warm color at about 58%. So this possibility too corroberates the presence of a strong color at roughly 62%.</p><p></p><p></p><p>In sum, the Drow features an impressive variety of possible eye colors. Which ones are common and which ones are rare depend on the setting, but even the rare possibilities are likely to exist. Typically, it is a vivid color that feels natural, probably leaning toward lighter shades. Less commonly the eye color can reach pure white, less often pure black, or even less often pure gray. The poll results allow flexibility in proportions because of the possibility of overlaps. Still, the player expectations seems to approximate something like the following in the aggregate.</p><p></p><p><strong>Drow Eye Colors</strong></p><p>• Vivid color - leaning toward lighter shades in contrast to blackish skin (62%)</p><p>• Whitish (21%)</p><p>• Blackish (11%)</p><p>• Grayish (6%)</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>EYE SHAPE</strong></p><p></p><p></p><p>The defining majority pictures the shape of a Drow eye as Human-like with a pupil and an iris, 69%. (26/40). However, Drow eyes can also be ‘all pupil and iris’, according to their old-school seminal description, with a large iris-size pupil, and the remainder of the eye being the solid color of an iris, without any white sclera at all, 21%. (9/40).</p><p></p><p></p><p>These two options seem to coexist. The large pupil without sclera might be a recessive trait that shows up among individuals. (Compare the probability of Human blue eyes.) The trait might correlate to regional differences. Alternatively, the two traits are a continuum, ranging from Human-like eyes to larger pupils and less sclera, until very large pupils and no sclera at all in 23% of the population.</p><p></p><p></p><p>In any case, voters overwhelming expect the presence of pupils. The Drow are this-worldly, physical, and natural creatures. Even if they originate from a spirit world, they are ‘fallen’ creatures who are now part of this world.</p><p></p><p></p><p>At the same time, about 10% of Drow have unnatural eyes of a solid color, without any pupil or iris. These eyes suggest individuals, houses, regions, or ethnicities with strange ties to a spirit world. Possibilities include intimate ties with the Plane of Faerie or Ether, or an Infernal Plane.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Note, a similar percentage of the Drow has eyes that glow in the Dark. It may well be, these otherworldly solid eyes are the ones that glow in the dark.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Some of the Drow solid eyes, if grayish black and nonglowing, might be insectoid, imitating the eyes of a spider that are solid with a fuzzy semi-reflective highlight and a hint of color.</p><p></p><p></p><p>In sum, the Drow tends strongly to have a natural-looking eye shape with pupil and iris. However it may or may not have a white sclera. Any presence of a solid eye derives from magical causes, especially contact with a spirit world or spider-like alteration.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>HEIGHT</strong></p><p></p><p></p><p>In the conflictive D&D traditions, the averege height of the Drow can be shorter than the Human or taller than the Human.</p><p></p><p></p><p>The votes show the player expectations in the aggregate, tend to picture the Drow around 5 feet 4 inches on average. Females appear taller than the average by +1 inch, and males shorter than the average by −1 inch.</p><p></p><p>Short individuals can be about 4 feet 7 inches and tall individuals can reach about 6 feet 1 inch.</p><p></p><p></p><p>[(34/53) × 5 feet] + [(19/53) ×6 feet]</p><p>= [3.21 feet] + [2.15 feet]</p><p>= 5.36 feet</p><p>= 5 feet 4.32 inches</p><p>≈ 5 feet 4 inches</p><p></p><p></p><p>With females +1 inch taller, the 5 feet 5 inches compares to the seminal description of the Drow female as 5½ feet.</p><p></p><p></p><p>At the same time, a wide bell-curve (+2d10) allows the average height to cover both the shortest and some of the tallest traditions. For random height, a base of 4 feet 5 inches + 2d10 reaches up to 6 feet 1 inch.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Even taller formulations are also possible. The Golarion setting of 3e Pathfinder, describes the Drow as typically taller than the Human, and upto 6 feet 8 inches tall. If player expectations feel it important to accommodate these taller Drow individuals, then an even wider bell-curve can help (+2d12). If the base is 4 feet 5 inches + 2d12, then the shortest is still 4 feet 7 inches. But the tallest can reach 6 feet 5 inches. Meanwhile the average height is a convenient 5 feet 6 inches, exactly 5½ feet.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>EARS</strong></p><p></p><p></p><p>Drow ears are pointy but subtle. This is one of the essential Drow characteristics.</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH]61190[/ATTACH]</p><p></p><p>An overwhelming 79% have subtly pointed ears. Compare Tolkien. Compare Spock. Not human but still human-like. From modern folklore such ears hint at wolf ears, and the concept ultimately derives from them to convey a nature spirit. Tolkien characterizes them as leaf-shaped connoting a vegetative nature spirit.</p><p></p><p></p><p>A minority 19% have prominant pointed ears. Compare goblinish exaggerated ears or WoW-ish ears. Such ears emphasize the animalistic quality more dramatically. Thus the nonhuman identity is more readily recognizable. The Goblin-like connotation might connote a more malevolent kind of ‘elf’. Any fully Human-like ears likely derive from Non-Drow origin.</p><p></p><p>Perhaps the ears reflect the overall concept of a Drow. The Drow are exotic, even malevolent, but still visually attractive to a Human. The Drow tends to express the ‘evil is sexy’ trope - or perhaps be a byproduct of the ‘sex is evil’ trope. Moreover, the Drow is an Elf and personifies the enchanting superhuman beauty and charm. The ears need be exotic, but remain Human enough for a Human to find appealing.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>FINGERS</strong></p><p></p><p>A slim majority picture the Drow with long delicate fingers and toes, 56%. (27/48). But more robust Human-like fingers and toes are almost as possible. These like represent a continuum, from Human-like to longer and more delicate. Note, the fingers are ‘longer’ in *proportion* to the hand. Actually, it is the size of the palm that is becoming smaller across the continuum. A smaller palm reaveals longer fingers.</p><p></p><p>Again, the Drow is exotic but appealing.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p><strong>PHYSIQUE</strong></p><p></p><p>The poll doesnt question the Drow physique. Official descriptions consistently describe the Drow as ‘slight of built’, ‘slender’, and so on, even when the Drow is taller than the Human. Similarly, the facial features tend to be ‘fine’ or ‘sharp’. Likewise the long delicate fingers correspond to overall slimness. At the same time, this leanness is described as appealing to Humans, ‘pleasant’, ‘shapely’, and so on. Especially, in the context of sexual tropes and high Charisma, the Drow is sexually appealing - to Humans.</p><p></p><p>The defining majority of the Drow appears to be slim, physically fit, and sexy.</p><p></p><p>Probability has a minority on each side of a bell-curve. The most robust Drow might resemble the physique of an average Human. The most gracile Drow might be skeletal, guant, and alien. The thin extreme may be more like an almond-eyed UFO alien and less like a grotesque goblin. Yet in between the Human versus skeletal extremes, the majority of the Drow exhibits a range of physiques that the Human considers attractive.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Yaarel, post: 6287064, member: 58172"] [B]THE ESSENCE OF THE APPEARANCE OF THE DROW [/B] Currently the poll has over 50 votes, so the results are probably stabilizing and representative. The essential characteristics of Drow appearance are: SKIN: pure black or dark color. HAIR: pure white or pale color. MALE FACIAL HAIR: none. EARS: pointed but subtle (compare Tolkien). Absent from the poll but probably essential: PHYSIQUE: slim, physically fit, and sexy. Alongside these four or five physical characteristics, the Drow allow a wide variety of possible appearances. Even the essential characteristics allow for some leeway. [B]VARIATION [/B] Drow appearances can vary depending on the setting. (24/51). In some settings, appearances vary depending on the region. (15/51). But in other settings, Drow are homogenous regardless of location. (12/51). Variations of Drow characteristics might correspond to individuals, family houses, subcultures, ethnicity, regions, planar contacts, or separate subraces. [B]SKIN[/B] Drow overwhelmingly exhibit skin that is blackish, pure black or a dark color. (45/68). Even so, as much as one third of the Drow in a particular setting might exhibit paler shades of colors. But even a lighter Drow tends to approximate a darker Human. Interpreting the votes, consider. The defining majority of Drow have black skin with gray red-purple highlights. This particular picture of the obsidian seems to represent the typical skin coloring and texture of a Drow. [ATTACH=CONFIG]61191._xfImport[/ATTACH] Now these softer reddish-purplish highlights can range into warmer hues or cooler hues, or colorless grays. This grayish red-purple obsidian is somewhere in the middle of the possibilities. The cooler highlights are bluer hues, such as grayish blue-purple shades of indigo. The warmer highlights are oranger hues, such as grayish red-orange shades of copper. The coloring can be less intense reaching into grays with fainter hints of red-purple, even colorless black-and-white. As much as a 20% of the Drow in a setting may exhibit a lighter skin color, mostly like darker Human pigmentations, but also as much as 10% may be like lighter Human pigmentations, and rare albinos may exist. Together, these 30% with lighter shades can range from gray to a dusky red-purple, with cooler or warmer possibilities. Settings might emphasize grayer and cooler Drow skins because these are Non-Human. But some settings might use the warmer coppery skin to emphasize the Human-like quality. For example, Forgotten Realms appears to assign the warmer Drow tones to the Drow ancestral subrace that is usually Good, in order to subvert the unintentional trope that dark skin equates to evil. In this case, the Human-like dark skin is inherently Good. Interestingly, the luster of the Drow skin can range from glossy and gemmy to matte and soft. The range leans toward matte, 54% But for the sake of illustrations, the darker skin might tend to be glossier so soft highlights and sharp gleams can help articulate facial shapes. Lighter shades can be glossy as well, resembling ‘glowing’ dancers and perspiring athletes. Originally, skin luster appeared gender-divided, but came to be equally likely for either gender. Note, the mythologically accurate ‘Dark Elf’ has pale sunless skin and black hair. A setting can describe a ‘Dark Elf’ (or ‘Black Elf’, ‘Night Elf’, etcetera) with almost any complexion and remain within recognizable tropes. However, a ‘Drow’ must have typically blackish skin and whitish hair, or else ceases to be recognizable as a ‘Drow’. A setting can portray the Drow with a significant degree of skin variation. Nevertheless, the blackish skin needs to remain the majority even for groups that can have lighter shades. [B]HAIR[/B] Drow hair is whitish, either pure white or a pale color, 62%. (49/79). Even so, as much as one fourth of the Drow in a setting might have somewhat darker shades of hair. Mostly these darker shades are paler shades of gray, such as silver, 18%. However hair can sometimes be very dark or even black, 9%. Surprisingly, the essence of Drow hair is whitish, but also colorless. It is shades of gray. Despite strong official support for warm colors, including yellowish (blond) and reddish, the voter response to colorful hair is unenthusiastic. Currently the possibility of dark hair, which has little support, is only about 9% (6/73). But this appears more acceptable than either a cooler blue-purple color 6% (5/73) or a warmer red-orange color 5% (4/73). In other words, Drow hair is commonly white, uncommonly gray, and rarely black. But the hair generally lacks color regardless of the shade of gray. Consider about 11% of hair can show some color. But even this tends toward paler hints of color. Drow is about 89% colorless. The player expectations for white hair colorless hair is so strong, settings should probably always assume it. For example in the Forgotten Realms setting, the ancestral subrace has Human-like warm dark skin with black hair. Because of expectations, this subrace feels dissonant and is difficult to perceive it as relating to the Drow. Of course, this is the point, the ‘curse’ of the Drow has been removed. Nevertheless, the subrace as an ‘ancestor’ would be more recognizable as Drow, and perhaps more relevant and interesting, if more typically exhibiting whitish hair with the Human-like warm dark skin. If so, the warm dark skin of this ‘Good Drow’ might connote white-hair elders among darker skin. It is possible to have a separate Dark Elf subraces, where one has light skin and dark hair, but then it lacks a direct link to the ‘Drow’. Relatedly, expectations for colorless hair suggest discontinuing official descriptions of Drow with blond or reddish hair. Such colors may exist among rare individuals, but they dont typify the Drow. Since Drow hair tends toward colorless, the presence of any intense color might evidence a Non-Drow bloodline. Likely, the luster of the whitish hair is glossy with a pearly or silvery sheen, or matte and dull. The probability leans slightly toward matte, like skin luster does. Descriptions imply glossy hair is more prestigious. Drow males typically lack any facial hair, 71%. (40/59). As much as a third of males might grow some facial hair, ranging from pale peach fuzz to wisps of sideburns, a soft thin mustache, or goatee, with a full beard becoming increasingly impossible. It is unclear if facial hair might be prestigious or embarassing with Drow known to shave - or prestidigitate. In sum, Drow hair is white. Less than a fourth have non-white hair. Even the non-white hair tends to be pale gray silver, and is uncommon. Dark shades of gray hair are unusual. Black hair seems rare. Regardless of shade, Drow hair tends strongly toward colorless shades of gray. Generally, any coloring tends to appears as hints of color in the highlights of white or silvery gray. [B]EYE COLOR [/B] The Drow has eyes, of course. But a setting has freedom to portray the eyes in a diversity of ways. Even so, Drow eyes are typically colorful. Eye color can be any hue of the spectrum: the warm hues of red, orange, or yellow, and the cool hues of purple, blue, and green. Which hues are common and which ones are uncommon depend on the setting. For example, in old-school Greyhawk, yellow-orange eyes are typical. But in Forgotten Realms, yellow-orange eyes are rare. Even descriptions for the same setting can conflict, thus encouraging the interpretation of house or regional tendencies. Drow eyes are twice as likely to be pure white (21%) as pure black (11%), while the defining majority somewhere in between. Eyes are unlikely to be grayish (6%). Thus Drow eyes tend strongly toward colorful. (62%). The color is vivid but less likely to be unnaturally bright. The color may be ‘exotic’ but feels natural, and tends to lean toward paler and softer (such as lavender), in contrast to the blackish skin. There is an interesting contrast between colorful eyes, colorless hair, and skin tending toward highlights somewhere in between. The defining majority of Drow have colorful eyes. Some prominant official settings describe the eyes warm and fiery (red or yellow-orange) or else whitish (white or pale). If these two are the only options, player expectation leans toward the vivid warm color at about 58%. So this possibility too corroberates the presence of a strong color at roughly 62%. In sum, the Drow features an impressive variety of possible eye colors. Which ones are common and which ones are rare depend on the setting, but even the rare possibilities are likely to exist. Typically, it is a vivid color that feels natural, probably leaning toward lighter shades. Less commonly the eye color can reach pure white, less often pure black, or even less often pure gray. The poll results allow flexibility in proportions because of the possibility of overlaps. Still, the player expectations seems to approximate something like the following in the aggregate. [B]Drow Eye Colors[/B] • Vivid color - leaning toward lighter shades in contrast to blackish skin (62%) • Whitish (21%) • Blackish (11%) • Grayish (6%) [B]EYE SHAPE[/B] The defining majority pictures the shape of a Drow eye as Human-like with a pupil and an iris, 69%. (26/40). However, Drow eyes can also be ‘all pupil and iris’, according to their old-school seminal description, with a large iris-size pupil, and the remainder of the eye being the solid color of an iris, without any white sclera at all, 21%. (9/40). These two options seem to coexist. The large pupil without sclera might be a recessive trait that shows up among individuals. (Compare the probability of Human blue eyes.) The trait might correlate to regional differences. Alternatively, the two traits are a continuum, ranging from Human-like eyes to larger pupils and less sclera, until very large pupils and no sclera at all in 23% of the population. In any case, voters overwhelming expect the presence of pupils. The Drow are this-worldly, physical, and natural creatures. Even if they originate from a spirit world, they are ‘fallen’ creatures who are now part of this world. At the same time, about 10% of Drow have unnatural eyes of a solid color, without any pupil or iris. These eyes suggest individuals, houses, regions, or ethnicities with strange ties to a spirit world. Possibilities include intimate ties with the Plane of Faerie or Ether, or an Infernal Plane. Note, a similar percentage of the Drow has eyes that glow in the Dark. It may well be, these otherworldly solid eyes are the ones that glow in the dark. Some of the Drow solid eyes, if grayish black and nonglowing, might be insectoid, imitating the eyes of a spider that are solid with a fuzzy semi-reflective highlight and a hint of color. In sum, the Drow tends strongly to have a natural-looking eye shape with pupil and iris. However it may or may not have a white sclera. Any presence of a solid eye derives from magical causes, especially contact with a spirit world or spider-like alteration. [B]HEIGHT[/B] In the conflictive D&D traditions, the averege height of the Drow can be shorter than the Human or taller than the Human. The votes show the player expectations in the aggregate, tend to picture the Drow around 5 feet 4 inches on average. Females appear taller than the average by +1 inch, and males shorter than the average by −1 inch. Short individuals can be about 4 feet 7 inches and tall individuals can reach about 6 feet 1 inch. [(34/53) × 5 feet] + [(19/53) ×6 feet] = [3.21 feet] + [2.15 feet] = 5.36 feet = 5 feet 4.32 inches ≈ 5 feet 4 inches With females +1 inch taller, the 5 feet 5 inches compares to the seminal description of the Drow female as 5½ feet. At the same time, a wide bell-curve (+2d10) allows the average height to cover both the shortest and some of the tallest traditions. For random height, a base of 4 feet 5 inches + 2d10 reaches up to 6 feet 1 inch. Even taller formulations are also possible. The Golarion setting of 3e Pathfinder, describes the Drow as typically taller than the Human, and upto 6 feet 8 inches tall. If player expectations feel it important to accommodate these taller Drow individuals, then an even wider bell-curve can help (+2d12). If the base is 4 feet 5 inches + 2d12, then the shortest is still 4 feet 7 inches. But the tallest can reach 6 feet 5 inches. Meanwhile the average height is a convenient 5 feet 6 inches, exactly 5½ feet. [B]EARS[/B] Drow ears are pointy but subtle. This is one of the essential Drow characteristics. [ATTACH=CONFIG]61190._xfImport[/ATTACH] An overwhelming 79% have subtly pointed ears. Compare Tolkien. Compare Spock. Not human but still human-like. From modern folklore such ears hint at wolf ears, and the concept ultimately derives from them to convey a nature spirit. Tolkien characterizes them as leaf-shaped connoting a vegetative nature spirit. A minority 19% have prominant pointed ears. Compare goblinish exaggerated ears or WoW-ish ears. Such ears emphasize the animalistic quality more dramatically. Thus the nonhuman identity is more readily recognizable. The Goblin-like connotation might connote a more malevolent kind of ‘elf’. Any fully Human-like ears likely derive from Non-Drow origin. Perhaps the ears reflect the overall concept of a Drow. The Drow are exotic, even malevolent, but still visually attractive to a Human. The Drow tends to express the ‘evil is sexy’ trope - or perhaps be a byproduct of the ‘sex is evil’ trope. Moreover, the Drow is an Elf and personifies the enchanting superhuman beauty and charm. The ears need be exotic, but remain Human enough for a Human to find appealing. [B]FINGERS[/B] A slim majority picture the Drow with long delicate fingers and toes, 56%. (27/48). But more robust Human-like fingers and toes are almost as possible. These like represent a continuum, from Human-like to longer and more delicate. Note, the fingers are ‘longer’ in *proportion* to the hand. Actually, it is the size of the palm that is becoming smaller across the continuum. A smaller palm reaveals longer fingers. Again, the Drow is exotic but appealing. [B]PHYSIQUE[/B] The poll doesnt question the Drow physique. Official descriptions consistently describe the Drow as ‘slight of built’, ‘slender’, and so on, even when the Drow is taller than the Human. Similarly, the facial features tend to be ‘fine’ or ‘sharp’. Likewise the long delicate fingers correspond to overall slimness. At the same time, this leanness is described as appealing to Humans, ‘pleasant’, ‘shapely’, and so on. Especially, in the context of sexual tropes and high Charisma, the Drow is sexually appealing - to Humans. The defining majority of the Drow appears to be slim, physically fit, and sexy. Probability has a minority on each side of a bell-curve. The most robust Drow might resemble the physique of an average Human. The most gracile Drow might be skeletal, guant, and alien. The thin extreme may be more like an almond-eyed UFO alien and less like a grotesque goblin. Yet in between the Human versus skeletal extremes, the majority of the Drow exhibits a range of physiques that the Human considers attractive. [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Post reply
Community
General Tabletop Discussion
*Pathfinder & Starfinder
What do Drow look like?
Top