Yes they were. I believe it will see the light of day somewhere around the launch of the Heroes of the Elemental Chaos.
More specifically, in the book

Yes they were. I believe it will see the light of day somewhere around the launch of the Heroes of the Elemental Chaos.
OR you could do like dms have always done and say, "Hey, we're not using races x and y from book z, but the gnome is fine!"
I mean, in 3.x a lot of us certainly banned spikers and silent-astral-big-hands guys and stuff. In 2e a lot of us said "No way!" to the complete book of humanoid nonsense. In 1e many dms said, "No pc drow/duergar/svirnfneblin in my campaign!"
Why is it any different now? Statements like that above lead me to wonder how clearly people see their own prejudices entering into their arguments. Honestly, it's kind of disingenuous.
You certainly do not have to say "Only PH1!!!!" to exclude wilden and shardminds. Nor do you have to say "I'll accept anything in the books!!!!" to allow gnomes into your campaign.
The inclusion of tieflings and dragonborn was also to expand the range of the game and its fiction. Both are extremely popular races, now.
It also de-emphasized alignment, race and religion as the defining characteristics of NPCs, in favor of a more nuanced approach. Contrast this to most of the 2E settings, which were pretty black and white in their approach to their NPCs.Someone in this thread mentioned the popularity of Al-Qadim. I think a lot of the reason it was so popular back in the day was because it was launched at the same time that Aladdin came out. Plus, the products were gorgeous. I would love to play AQ someday.
From the online writer's guidelines: "We're also not looking for articles that update material from previous editions; it’s not that we’re opposed to them, but we’re selective about what we update and when."
I think any article like that would come from in-house or a request sent out to specific freelancers, rather than something considered in a submission.
Overall I appreciate the sentiment though![]()
Well, that's relative. And I think you're strongly overstating their popularity. I think most settings only sold a fraction of the SKUs that other, more "generic" books could sell, with possible exceptions being Forgotten Realms, maybe Eberron at the peak of it's launch excitement, and maybe some Dragonlance too.The idea of supporting each setting may have caused big problems for TSR, but the settings themselves were immensely popular.
Well, that's relative. And I think you're strongly overstating their popularity. I think most settings only sold a fraction of the SKUs that other, more "generic" books could sell, with possible exceptions being Forgotten Realms, maybe Eberron at the peak of it's launch excitement, and maybe some Dragonlance too.