madelf said:Uh huh.
Sure they do.
If we're all just offering our opinions, there's no need to get a snarky attitude because Keith's definition differs from yours.
There's at the very least a considerable overlap between the common definitions of "pulp" and "swashbuckling," and intrigue and moral ambiguity are certainly aspects of noir. Whether any of these terms are strictly synonymous depends on how you define each...and genres are not always neatly defined.
Eberron is intended to encourage a style of play featuring that overlap between pulp and swashbuckling --- daring stunts, near misses, cliffhangers, sinister villains, larger-than-heroes. This style is encourage via new mechanics [including action points], and by citing various movies [many of which could be validly characterized as "swashbuckling" or "pulpy."]
Eberron also has numerous other characteristics [recounted by Henry] intended to invoke "the Pulp Era" --- since pulp [like swashbuckling] is closely associated with both a style and a particular millieu. It's "pulpy" by virtue of being in various geographical and historical respects analgous to the real world as depicted in the pulps of the 1920s-1940s.
To me, the only confusion as to what "pulp" is supposed to mean in this context is that both Sam Spade and Indiana Jones are in the mix. Both hard-boiled detective noir and cliffhanger adventures are called "pulp"...but it's two different --- and even contradictory --- styles.
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