DarkCrisis
Let her cook.
Mystara or nothing!
And even then, it's not like there aren't tons of products in other settings. We've had, what, about 10 hardcover books in other settings?Pretty much. I think default just means more/most attention by WOTC when it comes to products.
You misspelled "The Known World"Mystara or nothing!
This came up in one of the Planescape threads and I wanted to discuss it divorced from some of the specific issues around that particular setting.
First: what is a default setting? Is it the implied setting created by the lore behind monsters, characters and magic? Or is it a specific world that comes bundled with the rules, with names for countries and gods and kings and you are expected to use that setting unless you make up another? Note that I am asking what you think a "default setting" is. I am not asking for a definitive answer and we shouldn't argue as if there is one.
Second: In either case, however you personally come down on the definition of default setting, do you think D&D needs or should have one in the rule books? Why, or why not?
Discuss.
I answered a bit harsh to you in the Planescape thread before I saw you opened the thread here. With that explanation I understand your statement in the other thread better. I think what you call "implied setting" is just the genre for me. Its like the baseline that D&D agreed upon. But the moment you have specific definitions, like the gods one race might be praying to, the implied setting and the default setting are the same, because you need to have a specific setting to make those references. I think I agree that this is not needed and I don't like it as much, but I also have to admit that it doesn't really limit my game preperation, so if it helps other DM to have this specific default setting, I don't see anything against it.I personally think there is a difference between an "implied setting" and a "default setting." An "implied setting" to me is the sum of all the shallow lore in the books: dwarves are like this, and elves are like this, and magic works like this, etc... A "default setting" is a much more specific thing, like the Known World in BECMI or FR is 5E. I prefer if that default setting is a separate entity from the implied setting, as in the former, rather than strongly interwoven, as in the latter case.
Lots of games have baked in settings -- Shadowrun, Vampire, Earthdawn, etc... -- but I don't think D&D needs one. It probably can't avoid a "implied setting" though, and really only truly generic systems can IMO.
Thing is, it's a slidimg scale not a binary definition. Forgotten Realms is not the "default" setting for 5E even, going back to the Core rulebooks: there is tons of lore for other worlds in all 3 core books, and even the early Adventures particularly emphasized alternative possibilities. And it has become less and less default since Ravnica came out.I personally think there is a difference between an "implied setting" and a "default setting." An "implied setting" to me is the sum of all the shallow lore in the books: dwarves are like this, and elves are like this, and magic works like this, etc... A "default setting" is a much more specific thing, like the Known World in BECMI or FR is 5E. I prefer if that default setting is a separate entity from the implied setting, as in the former, rather than strongly interwoven, as in the latter case.
Lots of games have baked in settings -- Shadowrun, Vampire, Earthdawn, etc... -- but I don't think D&D needs one. It probably can't avoid a "implied setting" though, and really only truly generic systems can IMO.