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What is your favorite region within a published setting?

Forgotten Realms

Dalelands (with Elminster removed)
Moonsea North
Neverwinter (as per [MENTION=3586]MerricB[/MENTION]'s comment, this is due to the superb 4E book)
The North
Waterdeep (I challenge anyone who sees the room-sized map laid out from City System to dislike Waterdeep! :) )

These are all favourites with me. I've used them often enough that they feel a bit like home which makes it easy for me to "wing it".
 

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Glantri in Mystara.

Prax in Glorantha.

The Spinward Marches in the Third Imperium.
Campaign Map One in the Wilderlands.

Well, if we can pick non-D&D settings.

The Savage Coast in Mystara.

The Moonshaes in the Forgotten Realms.

Shou Lung from Kara-Tur.

Stormreach and it's environs from Eberron

Prax and the Wastes in Glorantha - more specifically Pavis and the River of Cradles, but with excursions into Prax, Vulture's Country, and beyond.

Trojan Reach sector in the Third Imperium. And Reaver's Deep come to think of it.

Logres from Pendragon.

Does the upper Anduin valley count, because that's an area I'm really enjoying in my The One Ring campaign?
 

I haven't used a lot of published settings. I'd probably go with Golarion's Varisia right now, but that's because I'm running a game there right now.

It's a good "Points of Light" setting. It does a job at providing a lot of threats for the party to handle without it seeming forced.

Pre-Faction War Sigil, the pre-metaplot Tablelands in Dark Sun, Shadowrun's Seattle and LA, and the area around Chi-town in Rifts are the only others I've run. Out of those, I'd have to say Sigil.

Sigil doesn't really need any introduction, but it's all in the factions for me. The planes and outsiders are just a backdrop to help illustrate why ideas are so damned important.

Cheers!
Kinak
 

I've always had a soft-spot for Q'Barra in Eberron. A jungle setting in a magitech era world has always felt very "opening scene of Raiders" to me, thereby empasizing the pulp genre.
 

The Astral Sea of D&D4. Is that too broad? The cosmology of D&D4 in general presses all my buttons, but the Astral Sea has planejammers.

PLANEJAMMERS.

/nerd
 

I already mentioned my love for the North in the Forgotten Realms in the thread that sparked this one.

Looking at Planescape, I very much like the chaotic planes like Arborea, Pandemonium, and the Abyss, and also the Beastlands, Hades, and Gehenna. Everything from Baator to Elysium leaves me completely cold.
Eladrin, Tanar'ri, and Yogoloths yay. Batezu, Modrons, Archons, and Guardinals nay.

In Eberron, I like Xen'drik and to some extend Sarlona. Khorvaire is a continent that barely gets my attention and interest at all. Eldeen Reaches, Demon Wastes, and Shadow Marches are a bit of an exception, but they are not so interesting that I would want to run a game there. In that case there are other settings I'd like to play much more.

Mostly I think Golarion is a bad setting. But if I absolutely had to run a campaign in Golarion for some weird reason, I would set it in the Northwest, in the Linorm Kingdoms, the Mammoth Lord Lands, or Irrisien.

In the Star Wars universe, my favorite sub-setting is not a location but a time: I really love the Knights of the Old Republic era much more than any of the others. The Rebellion Era is of course okay and I see some merrit in the Rise of the Empire era as well, but New Republic and Legacy era are parts of the universe I've always been shying away from.
While it's not a huge difference, the Old Republic era has a quite different feel. More wild and unexplored, with many small factions instead of a few big ones, and a more mystical Force than the later eras, which are so much more about grand politics.

And yes, there clearly is a pattern. I strongly prefer settings that are more uncivilized and wild, where it's about small groups in a harsh environment, rather than about highly developed kingdoms and politics.
 
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Oathbound. Penance.

Israfel.jpg


Also a big fan of Sigil, 'cuz duh.
 


Forgotten Realms
Waterdeep (I challenge anyone who sees the room-sized map laid out from City System to dislike Waterdeep! :) )

This. The 1st ed. City System boxed set is far superior to the 2nd ed. City of Splendors boxed set, which, while pretty and having the bonus of 3d cardboard cutout buildings, isn't anywhere near the same scale. It lets you visualize wards and neighborhoods, but the 1st ed. maps let you visualize down to individual dwellings...

I also really really like the City of Greyhawk's boxed set as well, even if not fully true to the Gygaxian original...

Maldin's online map of Greyhawk is quite impressive as well.
 


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