All that "breaks" means here is departs from canon. Every campaign world will depart from canon, insofar as it will contain events or elements that are non-canonical; and will not include every canoncial event/element (eg because, to quote you, "Canon didn't freeze with the original booklet."This thread is about canon, so I am arguing from the viewpoint of official settings and canon. The DM of course can do whatever he wants, and if you want Wizard of High Sorcery in Greyhawk, that's your prerogative. It just breaks the official Greyhawk setting to do so.
The fact that a campaign departs from the canon of some setting doesn't meant that it's not a campaign set in that setting. I've seen many posters on these boards post "In my FR game there is no Drizzt!" or "In my FR game the Time of Troubles didn't happen" or other things like that. Those are not self-contradictory statements. A game can be a FR game although it departs from canon in these or other ways. That doesn't "break" anything.
Likewise my GH game. It departs from canon at various points. It doesn't "break" anything. And it's a GH game, just as those games are FR games. Just as someone might play a Middle Earth game in which Bilbo didn't find the ring. Or play a Marvel Heroic RP game in which Nightcrawler and Wolverine aren't buddies.
Literally the same ones? So how did they get there? What did they evolve from? What are your criteria of identity, such that beings with similar taxonomy but (presumably) very diferent actual histories still count as dinosaurs, but an order of wizards with similar practices and relationships to astronomical features as the WoHS, but a different actual history (ie on Oerth, not Krynn) and related to different moons (ie GH moons, not Krynn ones) does not count as WoHS? Why is concrete history and moon identity crucial to WoHS, but concrete history and evolutionary identity not crucial to dinosaurs?The stats on dinosaurs in the D&D editions I have looked at indicate that they are the same as the ones that went extinct on Earth many millions of years ago.
To the best of my knowledge, no one on earth can use a palintir. Which is a defining feature of Aragorn the ranger, and of rangers as defined in classic D&D. In other words, the classic D&D ranger (not the 2nd ed AD&D class, which has little in common but the name), who is a somewhat woods-y soldier who also studies with wizards (like Farimir) and can track (like the rangers of the north and of Ithilien) and who, upon becoming a Ranger Lord, can use palintiri (like Aragorn), is extremely setting specific.Rangers are not tied to setting like Wizards of High Sorcery are. We have them here on Earth for Pete's sake.
The original version in The Strategic Review makes this specificity even more apparent, because it also includes the ability to heal (unlike the AD&D version):
Ranger-Knights are able to employ magic items which heal or cure disease, including scrolls.
Ranger-Lords are able to employ all devices which deal with Clairvoyance, Clairaudience, ESP, Telepathy, Telekenesis, and Teleportation, including scrolls.
Ranger-Lords are able to employ all devices which deal with Clairvoyance, Clairaudience, ESP, Telepathy, Telekenesis, and Teleportation, including scrolls.
The Aragorn-esque foundations of the classic ranger is, to be frank, notorious.
You said it's bad DMing! Here's the quote, in case you've forgotten:No. I have never said or implied that you were doing anything wrong by using things from one setting in another. I have been saying that it breaks canon and can't be done without breaking canon.
you might argue that those similar, but different wizards who get power from Greyhawk moons can also call themselves Wizards of High Sorcery. That's true, but that's very poor DMing in my opinion.
That is quite unalloyed. There's no equivocation. You've described my decision, in the running of my GH game, as very poor DMing.
Well, now you know. Which way are you going? Are you owning your comment - or have you changed your mind, having seen an instance of the practice which (in my humble opinon) refutes the contention beyond doubt.I didn't accuse you of poor DMing since I didn't know you kept the same name. I sort of assumed you changed the name like you did with the knights.