What exactly makes the Greyhawk Campaign Setting


log in or register to remove this ad

Garnfellow said:
Whatever happened to him (her)? Screed was probably the most infuriating . . . and interesting poster on the old AOL Greyhawk boards. Always worth reading.

Agreed. Iquander (Erik Mona) was also awesome, of course.

But that was long, long ago, in a galaxy far, far away.
 

Nellisir said:
Because they hate change.

Especially change with no respect . . . what's the deal with taking the single biggest thing for the PC's in the whole campaign -- Against the Giants/Drow series -- and saying, "Well, offline, the PC's must have lost, because the giants won the war". Excuse me?!

That's like when 2nd Edition PHB came out, while I was playing a half-orc assassin. For Political Correctness/mom-friendliness reasons, both half-orcs and assassins were removed as player options in the new edition. You're BANNING my character? What gives you the right?

So, that's when I stopped buying anything from TSR until 1998, when they revived Greyhawk with a little disrespect.

Long-live Gygax, long-live WOTC, down with Lorraine Williams, From the As*es, and 2nd Edition! :]
 

S'mon said:
Greyhawk by EGG has a strong "Good isn't really Good - Neutrality is better" theme, and the squabbling 'good' powers support this. EGG's heroes are Neutrals like Mordenkainen & Gord, Good is presented as shallow, rigid & up-its-own-a**, I think this derives from EGG being a lapsed Catholic while defining Greyhawk 'Good' more in Catholic terms rather than post-Enlightenment terms. Evil powers fighting each other rather than being monolithic, and often making deals with non-evil powers, is also a Greyhawk theme, yup.

I thought Gygax was a Jehovah's Witness?

And this seems to be a common trend in 'traditional' D&D worlds overall--it's quite pervasive in Dragonlance, and I think it may even show up in FR and Planescape.

It's one of the reasons I favor Ravenloft. :-)

Matthew L. Martin
 


Nellisir said:
And QSam, and Aria13....

Didn't they turn out to be the same poster? I seem to remember a hullabaloo or two over that right before I left AOL.

We should stage a reunion thread or something . . . it would be neat to see what happened to that gang.
 

Garnfellow said:
We should stage a reunion thread or something . . . it would be neat to see what happened to that gang.

I can't shake the feeling that NiteScreed spontaneously combusted with the release of 3rd Edition. :-)

Matthew L. Martin, who lurked on the AOL GH board despite having little to no interest in the setting. I was there for the soap opera. :-)
 

Matthew L. Martin said:
I can't shake the feeling that NiteScreed spontaneously combusted with the release of 3rd Edition. :-)
He actually showed up recently over on the WotC Board's Greyhawk forum a few months ago for a brief period.
 

Eric Anondson said:
He [Nitescreed] actually showed up recently over on the WotC Board's Greyhawk forum a few months ago for a brief period.

Canonfire, also. Basically yanked a few shorts and left. Good ol' Nitescreed.

Garnfellow said:
Didn't they [Aria13 & QSamantha] turn out to be the same poster? I seem to remember a hullabaloo or two over that right before I left AOL.

I dunno. I always got the feeling there was a joke in there I wasn't a part of. And it's potentially evidence that Roger Moore made them sort of the same person/character in "The Adventure Begins". (I got to be a captain of the watch - yay me!)

QSam turned up over on the Paizo boards a few months ago -- maybe coincidence, maybe not.

I just decided not to care. If QSam, Aria, and Screed are all the same person, then kudos to h/im/er. They outposted everyone on that board by about 10. And they were cool, fun, intelligent people.

Cheers,
Nell.
 
Last edited:

haakon1 said:
Huh, ya learn something new everyday. I didn't realize Gygax was a lapsed Catholic. Tolkien, on the other hand, was quite unlapsed as I understand it, and C.S. Lewis was a super-serious convert. Not sure what that means . . . other than Mel Gibson rocks! :lol:

Yes, Tolkien was a serious Catholic and CS Lewis was a lapsed Ulster Protestant who later became a serious Catholic, hence his works are the most overtly religious of any children's fantasy I know.
 

Remove ads

Top