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  1. - Top - End - #1
    Ettin in the Playground
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    Default All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Recently I've seen some voicing of the opinion that some folks absolutely hate the approaches towards a setting known as "All Myths are True" (exactly what it says on the tin) and "Fantasy Kitchen Sink" (Oh, so the setting has humans and dwarves and goblins and trolls and faeries and shark people and insects with mind powers and super advanced aliens that lost their culture and...).

    Now, of course this is no surprise to me in the least bit at all since, like all things in life, there are different strokes for different folks. But it just seemed to me as a wonderful topic to center a discussion thread around: whether you enjoy the use of those tropes or you despise them or what have you.


    I'll start us off by saying that I personally love both approaches with the following caveats:

    • The setting is large enough - The world that the setting is placed in needs to be large enough to contain this vast menagerie of beasties and civilized folk. I don't even mean just size, because a small world or setting can meet the clarification of "large enough". I mean that there has to be enough unexplored corners of the map or general ignorance among the population of the setting or just general mystery and intrigue that it's plausible for these things to be out there. I find it exhilarating to discover an ancient city of temple dwelling spider people on a previously unvisited jungle island and exposing them to the wider world for the first time or to encounter an undead horror in the dead of night that only came to exist because conditions near impossible for the region just happened to align. But it needs to be believable and not just shoehorned in (or worse, either completely explained and gone "ooh" at or just shrugged away as another day on the job). Sure, the setting could attempt to take a Masquerade approach to achieve this, but it begins to stretch the suspension of disbelief till it twangs.
    • There is little to no unexplained overlap - Through out folklore you'll find plenty of overlap between ideas and archetypes and monsters and such, which is all and good and neat to see. On the other hand, if you've got 17 types of blood sucking undead or 20 types of subterranean dwelling goblin-y folk and not only is there no coherent explanation for why so many exist, but they also don't interact or even know the other breeds exist either (or even worse, both things happen and are handwaved); that's when I say you've taken the tropes from exciting and fun to completely out of control and tedious.


    So, in short, I enjoy both tropes but only so far in that they don't destroy my suspension of disbelief in the setting and their presence feels organic.

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Well, that's nice for you.

    So...?
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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Quote Originally Posted by Yora View Post
    Well, that's nice for you.

    So...?
    He is trying to start a discussion on the merits and flaws of both approches and why/which people prefer them (I assume).

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Quote Originally Posted by 123456789blaaa View Post
    He is trying to start a discussion on the merits and flaws of both approches and why/which people prefer them (I assume).
    Yup. I just viewed this as something that could spark a good intellectual discussion.

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    I dunno, I think stylistic consistency is something to be highly valued. But it really has nothing to do with the number of elements in the setting and everything to do with how well they fit together.

    There's actually a very simple rule of thumb that you can use to test for this in 99% of cases, and it's this: "If I removed X from the setting, how much else about the setting do I have to change before things start to make sense again?"

    If the answer is "Basically nothing at all," then you have a problem.

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Quote Originally Posted by Troll Brau View Post
    • The setting is large enough
    • There is little to no unexplained overlap
    Well doesn't the first sort of solve the second? I mean, on our planet there are dozens of species of birds that specifically specialize in eating flying insects and use color cues in lieu of or in addition to mating calls, each a little bit different because at some point in history they lost contact with their kin. If you're going to assume that there is a startlingly large number of intelligent species on the planet (a common fantasy assumption), then why wouldn't there be a large number of intelligent species in each ecological niche that a sapient species can fill? Add to this the fact that most fantasy worlds are relatively young-- i.e., set in a time where technology would only barely have been at the level it was at when the Americas were discovered-- and it would almost make *more* sense to have a dozen similar but distinct subterranean races separated by oceans or the like.

    But, that's just a plausibility thing. In the design sense, I agree. Less is generally more when it comes to fantasy races. My homebrew world started with over a dozen, and now has... 3, maybe 4. In fantasy, there's only so many niches that can be filled before it starts becoming silly.

    I'm generally a supporter of the "every myth is true" thing, as long as it's presented well: Don't throw them all in the same continent. That's just silly, and none of the backstories would work. They need to have been separated for a while.

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Quote Originally Posted by Jack of Spades View Post
    Well doesn't the first sort of solve the second? I mean, on our planet there are dozens of species of birds that specifically specialize in eating flying insects and use color cues in lieu of or in addition to mating calls, each a little bit different because at some point in history they lost contact with their kin. If you're going to assume that there is a startlingly large number of intelligent species on the planet (a common fantasy assumption), then why wouldn't there be a large number of intelligent species in each ecological niche that a sapient species can fill? Add to this the fact that most fantasy worlds are relatively young-- i.e., set in a time where technology would only barely have been at the level it was at when the Americas were discovered-- and it would almost make *more* sense to have a dozen similar but distinct subterranean races separated by oceans or the like.
    I have a significant problem with this, actually.

    1. Evolution operates at a literally sub-glacial pace, even for small changes.

    2. Sapience is something that's actually really complicated and difficult to evolve.

    Sapient minds can build technologies way, way faster than evolution can build new types of sapient minds from scratch. See the problem? The emergence of modern sapience would have to have happened basically simultaneously (and independently) to get the fantasy situation where you have dozens of intelligent species who live on the same planet (or even the same continent). The chances of this are ridiculously low. Otherwise the first one out of the gate would invent the technologies needed to conquer the world before the others would be able to fight back.



    Of course this is irrelevant as most fantasy races don't evolve, they're created. Which introduces a bunch more problems when you think about how there are these extremely powerful deities who are operating more or less independently, or even worse, a single deity.

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Quote Originally Posted by Craft (Cheese) View Post
    I have a significant problem with this, actually.

    1. Evolution operates at a literally sub-glacial pace, even for small changes.

    2. Sapience is something that's actually really complicated and difficult to evolve.

    Sapient minds can build technologies way, way faster than evolution can build new types of sapient minds from scratch. See the problem? The emergence of modern sapience would have to have happened basically simultaneously (and independently) to get the fantasy situation where you have dozens of intelligent species who live on the same planet (or even the same continent). The chances of this are ridiculously low. Otherwise the first one out of the gate would invent the technologies needed to conquer the world before the others would be able to fight back.



    Of course this is irrelevant as most fantasy races don't evolve, they're created. Which introduces a bunch more problems when you think about how there are these extremely powerful deities who are operating more or less independently, or even worse, a single deity.
    This is solved neatly in a setting with planar travel though. If you've got dozens of worlds, each with its own pantheon, then its no longer quite so weird that the various sets of gods would create various sets of things independently of eachother. If planar travel is restricted to certain conjunctions, even the evolutionary invention of sentient races makes more sense.

    Of course the other point with the evolutionary picture is, lots of these different 'species' of intelligent creature can actually interbreed, so they're more like ethnicities. It suggests a common (sentient) ancestor, and a lot less genetic distance than you might expect based on outward features.

    Another easy solution to the 'huge number of sentients' problem is literally 'a wizard did it'. If permanent polymorph magic exists in the setting, perhaps a lot of the diversity is a product of ancient wizards who were playing around with Polymorph Any Object and the like.

    A fourth possibility, also pushed by the Planescape sort of cosmology, is that most of the sentient races that exist come from the dreams and beliefs of eachother. Basically, if enough people believe in a mythos, things of that mythos begin to exist in the shadows and rarely observed places. Human belief has incredible diversity - thats what you're pulling from to make a kitchen sink setting - so it makes sense that you'd get an incredible diversity of strange things in response.

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Quote Originally Posted by Jack of Spades View Post
    -Snip about Evolution and such-
    Well, like Cheese pointed out, this is a little more difficult when it comes to sapience and sentience. And I don't mean each having it's own little niche spread across a planetary scale, I meant more how they all kind of exist on top of each other but don't even know they exist on top of each other. Like having Derro, Morlocks, Mites, Tommyknockers, Gray Dwarves, Skum and Troglodytes all living in the same subterranean system under one continent but having no thought out explanation on how they all interact with one another (if the creator even bothered to let each race/species know each other exist in the first place to one another).

    But, that's just a plausibility thing. In the design sense, I agree. Less is generally more when it comes to fantasy races. My homebrew world started with over a dozen, and now has... 3, maybe 4. In fantasy, there's only so many niches that can be filled before it starts becoming silly.
    I'll admit that part of this thread is some research for my own setting that I'm planning to sit down and write and part my own curiosity on the discussion of the subject.

    I'm generally a supporter of the "every myth is true" thing, as long as it's presented well: Don't throw them all in the same continent. That's just silly, and none of the backstories would work. They need to have been separated for a while.
    Which is basically what I'm saying. As long as it's organic and doesn't make my head hurt trying to rationalize them all there, the more weird the better.

    Quote Originally Posted by NichG View Post
    A fourth possibility, also pushed by the Planescape sort of cosmology, is that most of the sentient races that exist come from the dreams and beliefs of eachother. Basically, if enough people believe in a mythos, things of that mythos begin to exist in the shadows and rarely observed places. Human belief has incredible diversity - thats what you're pulling from to make a kitchen sink setting - so it makes sense that you'd get an incredible diversity of strange things in response.
    You know, I've never even thought of the "Hogfather theory of creation" that you're suggesting there. I actually really like the concept of that; have a setting where magic practically suffuses every bit of the plane (but is not necessarily plainly present or accessible) and have it react to enough unconscious/subconscious belief to convert thought into actual reality. Mind if I use it?
    Last edited by Tanuki Tales; 2012-09-14 at 07:36 PM.

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    I'm kind of torn on the issue personally;

    On the one hand, I hate Generic Fantasy settings with a fiery passion. Goblinoids and Elves/Fey are tolerable under certain conditions but Dwarves, Gnomes, Halflings, Orcs and Lizardfolk are just grating. If they actually have some personality and mostly stay out of the main narrative, like Tolkien Dwarves, they can be alright but otherwise it doesn't add anything of substance.

    On the other hand, I love nWoD style worlds where there a tons of weird one-off creatures or hidden supernatural societies beneath a mundane exterior and Generic Superhero settings where they all run around in the open. It makes the world feel bigger and more mysterious, rather than cheapening the experience.

    Maybe the difference is more about tone? I like Eberron, and that setting was explicitly built to hold everything 3.5 made, so it could just be that I have a problem with the Realms and Kyrnn specifically. Either way, it's 100% subjective.

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Quote Originally Posted by Troll Brau View Post
    You know, I've never even thought of the "Hogfather theory of creation" that you're suggesting there. I actually really like the concept of that; have a setting where magic practically suffuses every bit of the plane (but is not necessarily plainly present or accessible) and have it react to enough unconscious/subconscious belief to convert thought into actual reality. Mind if I use it?
    I didn't come up with it I'm afraid . This was actually the canon explanation in 2ed D&D, at least for the Planescape setting which was sort of the meta-setting that was supposed to combine all settings.

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    My problem with "all myths are true" is that it's illogical. People get mistaken. People forget details. People exaggerate. People lie or fabricate stories from wholecloth.

    What versions stick around is not decided strictly by what is true, but what sounds plausible and is memorable. Quite often, real events are so arbitrary or implausible that people ignore them in favor of a more colourful, but at least partly false, narrative.

    There's no reason whatsoever for this not to be true even if some supernatural elements of a setting are true. Even if dragons are real, it doesn't mean all tales told of dragons should be real.

    This is something a lot of fantasy authors could improve on. In fantasy settings too, there should be things that are purely imaginary, or never have their truth value confirmed! It can also be more rewarding to perceptive and logical players when there's a natural explanation for an event despite in-game characters claiming that "a wizard did it".

    As for "fantasy kitchen sink", my main problem is that every supernatural element you add takes away wonder from natural elements - but you can use 100% natural, real-life-physics-abiding things to convey a fantastic feel! Look at all weird, 100% non-magical animals on Earth. Chances are, many of your players have never seen some of them live, or perhaps have never even heard of them. But, as shown in another thread on this forum, it's hard to be impressed by the horror that is a rampaging hippo when every nook and corner is filled with dragons, ghosts, oozes, demons and goblins. As the number of fantastic elements increases, the less applicable real-world knowledge is, and in my experience, players can even become less thinking of the setting as a result! They start accepting every weird thing as "magic" (etc.), no longer prying into their real reasons or coming up with imaginative solutions.
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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Quote Originally Posted by Frozen_Feet View Post
    As for "fantasy kitchen sink", my main problem is that every supernatural element you add takes away wonder from natural elements - but you can use 100% natural, real-life-physics-abiding things to convey a fantastic feel! Look at all weird, 100% non-magical animals on Earth. Chances are, many of your players have never seen some of them live, or perhaps have never even heard of them. But, as shown in another thread on this forum, it's hard to be impressed by the horror that is a rampaging hippo when every nook and corner is filled with dragons, ghosts, oozes, demons and goblins. As the number of fantastic elements increases, the less applicable real-world knowledge is, and in my experience, players can even become less thinking of the setting as a result! They start accepting every weird thing as "magic" (etc.), no longer prying into their real reasons or coming up with imaginative solutions.
    I personally see the reason this happens not because of the existence of magic or the supernatural but because of the inherent power creep of leveling.

    A hippo, for example, is a CR 5 creature, sharing that position with things like Trolls, Green Hags and Bearded Devils. So it keeps impressive company for it's bracket and is a threat to a certain degree for a stretch, but the thing that dooms it as a less than terrifying speed bump is the fact it's not sentient, so you need to make it magic to keep up since it can't accrue class levels.

    So I guess you need to play E6 to give the mundane world the kind of fear inspiring awe that it has in the real world.

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Quote Originally Posted by Craft (Cheese) View Post
    I have a significant problem with this, actually.

    1. Evolution operates at a literally sub-glacial pace, even for small changes.

    2. Sapience is something that's actually really complicated and difficult to evolve.

    Sapient minds can build technologies way, way faster than evolution can build new types of sapient minds from scratch. See the problem? The emergence of modern sapience would have to have happened basically simultaneously (and independently) to get the fantasy situation where you have dozens of intelligent species who live on the same planet (or even the same continent). The chances of this are ridiculously low. Otherwise the first one out of the gate would invent the technologies needed to conquer the world before the others would be able to fight back.

    Of course this is irrelevant as most fantasy races don't evolve, they're created. Which introduces a bunch more problems when you think about how there are these extremely powerful deities who are operating more or less independently, or even worse, a single deity.
    Well, if you think about it, there's not much difference logical-leap-wise between "All of these races evolved near-simultaneously on the geographic scale" and "An unseen god created all of these races."

    Although I was in no way attempting to endorse either of those logical leaps. I think the idea of more than a couple of sapient species rising on a planet and not destroying one another before they have any chance of creating civilization is a bit off to begin with. I mean, arguably we didn't manage to do it here in the real world (Homo sapiens and Neanderthals).

    As I generally do, I was just trying to come up with a plausible-ish explanation. And that explanation started with the weird and mostly wrong assumption that somehow multiple sapient species arose on the planet in such a way that they didn't all kill one another immediately.
    Quote Originally Posted by Frozen_Feet View Post
    This is something a lot of fantasy authors could improve on. In fantasy settings too, there should be things that are purely imaginary, or never have their truth value confirmed! It can also be more rewarding to perceptive and logical players when there's a natural explanation for an event despite in-game characters claiming that "a wizard did it".
    Fun thing to do: Say there's Dwarves in them hills, then warp what Dwarves are in such a way that the players' understanding of a Dwarf is obviously just folklore. The Dwarves in the hills may be short and vaguely humanoid, but who says they don't have probosces or something? It's your setting, weird it up.

    Oh, but make sure any and all weird is explainable. That's a deal-breaker for a lot of people.

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    I am a huge supporter of the Big World idea. I love the idea of a truly infinite multiverse full of more things then anyone knows about anywhere anytime anyhow.

    I really don't like the small world idea, such as Dragonlance, Middle Earth or Ebberon. The idea that the whole world only has one evil city, so if you encounter an evil guy, then they must have automatically come from the evil city, as there is no other place for them to have come from. I hate where in the game, you travel 4,000 miles, and are attacked by a wizard with the spell burning hands exactly like the wizards 4,000 miles away cast. It's even worse when you end up on the 321st level of the Abyss and the demons there attack with burning hands.

    This is why I have always loved the Forgotten Realms, the setting is big enough to hold everything. FR has a good 200+ gods (pre 4E when they pandered to the 'others' and killed off 99% of the gods to make things easier for the FR haters to play in the Realms).

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Well the thing about the Kitchen Sink TM is that you need only use a sub-set of the available options, in fact that's pretty much obligatory.

    Moreover: if you wish to support exploration of the setting, then you get to do reveals on things which were hidden. Most players enjoy setting exploration, in one form or another.

    All Myths are True does seem something of a fallacy since you can never fit the whole Kitchen Sink TM into any actual game, its just to large.

    I think it comes down to game style.
    If you want to run a Culture style space opera, or a Sigil style plane hopping game then settings which approach All Myths are True can work; but if you want a more detailed game which explores cultures or eco-systems then less is far more.
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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    I like a little bit of a Lewis-Carrol vibe… you run into creatures or people that are unique. They don't have a species because it's just them. How'd they get there? Maybe it's a side-plane where things get shunted off, or perhaps they just pop into being in the middle of forests every so often. Maybe they've always been there, and just don't remember that far back. Sure, it doesn't make much sense, but it's fun when you can run into weird stuff. For the sake of DM sanity and general coherence, there might be a common race/species or two that makes up a lot of the population, but they've run into enough odd things that a talking six-legged cat can still do business in a village or city.

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    I don't object to worlds being huge, but I tend to stick with a subset of things. There may be 90 different kinds of humanoids, but chances are, you're just going get the same 4-6 types from me. There may be hundreds of varieties of undead (Dark Sun insisted that most major undead were unique), but I tend to use the favored few.

    I like the kitchen sink because I can throw in the random ones from time to time... but I'm not forced to. It just gives my players more to consider as possibilities. "Yeah, chance are it's a vampire... but what other things MIGHT it be, because Mark likes to throw the occasional curve ball."
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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    What category does Conan and the like fall under? They generally have an endless supply of strange and new things, but you can't exactly catalogue them like in DnD.
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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Quote Originally Posted by Conners View Post
    What category does Conan and the like fall under? They generally have an endless supply of strange and new things, but you can't exactly catalogue them like in DnD.
    Conan the barbarian (if that's the Conan you mean) falls under the genre of Sword and Sorcery. Some people also refer to it as "pulp fantasy".

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Quote Originally Posted by Gamer Girl View Post
    I really don't like the small world idea, such as Dragonlance, Middle Earth or Ebberon. The idea that the whole world only has one evil city, so if you encounter an evil guy, then they must have automatically come from the evil city, as there is no other place for them to have come from. I hate where in the game, you travel 4,000 miles, and are attacked by a wizard with the spell burning hands exactly like the wizards 4,000 miles away cast. It's even worse when you end up on the 321st level of the Abyss and the demons there attack with burning hands.

    This is why I have always loved the Forgotten Realms, the setting is big enough to hold everything. FR has a good 200+ gods (pre 4E when they pandered to the 'others' and killed off 99% of the gods to make things easier for the FR haters to play in the Realms).
    I'm not sure what you mean about the "only one evil city"; Eberron has a lot of moral ambiguity. And FR still has the "everyone casts burning hands" thing. While Eberron doesn't have as many gods, each religion is split into a huge number of competing sects.
    Last edited by Prime32; 2012-09-15 at 06:27 PM.

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Am running a Shin Megami Tensei campaign currently. There's no way I could capture that feel without having that trope in play.
    Me: I'd get the paladin to help, but we might end up with a kid that believes in fairy tales.
    DM: aye, and it's not like she's been saved by a mysterious little girl and a band of real live puppets from a bad man and worse step-sister to go live with the faries in the happy land.
    Me: Yeah, a knight in shining armour might just bring her over the edge.

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Me? I bathe in fantasy kitchen sink. I'm kinda disappointed that it isn't a fantasy kitchen sink. Feels like reality could've done better. I like the variety and menagerie-esque feel of it. I think what bothers people is having all this too concentrated one spot in the setting y'know? My fantasy kitchen sinks have all sorts of things, but I always make sure that most of the stuff, is like, separate.
    There could be like for example, ten different vampires, but they are in like, ten different places in the cosmos far from each other, to the point where they don't know about each other and I can easily pick only one of them to use in a story you see, confine a story to only one specific type of vampire and such.

    But mostly, I guess unlike most, I don't really like limits. When I look at other settings I always feel like they are a little sparse, like they are lacking variety.
    That and I could not possibly allow options to go shut out for no reason. I like the variety, I like the chaos and such of fantasy kitchen sinks, cause to me thats how the real world is: full of chaos, full of variety and colors and whatnot, just too big and great to really pin down fully y'know? that and its fun considering how various different things from all parts of reality would react to each other and how people would live in such a highly fantastical place of magic and technology….
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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Quote Originally Posted by Craft (Cheese) View Post
    I have a significant problem with this, actually.

    1. Evolution operates at a literally sub-glacial pace, even for small changes.

    2. Sapience is something that's actually really complicated and difficult to evolve.

    Sapient minds can build technologies way, way faster than evolution can build new types of sapient minds from scratch. See the problem? The emergence of modern sapience would have to have happened basically simultaneously (and independently) to get the fantasy situation where you have dozens of intelligent species who live on the same planet (or even the same continent). The chances of this are ridiculously low. Otherwise the first one out of the gate would invent the technologies needed to conquer the world before the others would be able to fight back.
    Quote Originally Posted by Jack of Spades View Post
    Well, if you think about it, there's not much difference logical-leap-wise between "All of these races evolved near-simultaneously on the geographic scale" and "An unseen god created all of these races."

    Although I was in no way attempting to endorse either of those logical leaps. I think the idea of more than a couple of sapient species rising on a planet and not destroying one another before they have any chance of creating civilization is a bit off to begin with. I mean, arguably we didn't manage to do it here in the real world (Homo sapiens and Neanderthals).
    I've meant to address this, being trained as an evolutionary biologist, but it's taken a bit to collect my thoughts.

    While sentience is certainly not going to be common in any world that has evolution by natural selection, it might not be as rare as you might think. Corvids (crows and their allies) and dolphins are certainly more intelligent than the score of 2 that D&D gives them, and to some anthropologists' minds, the only thing differentiating them and our ancestors is the fact that our ancestors had hands with which to make complicated tools, which gives a much larger incentive to produce language.

    Moreover, the evolution of intelligence doesn't have to be independent. If it weren't for the fact that our ancestors were murderous, indiscriminately promiscuous cannibals, there would almost certainly be multiple more-or-less intelligent human subspecies, and the murderous/cannibalistic part isn't necessarily going to come up every time.

    This is even more the case if we can get some geographical isolation going. Neanderthals and modern humans weren't strictly isolated; they were isolated by climate and distance. If you'd thrown up something like the Himalayas or an ocean between them, they would have independently evolved, possibly to the point of complete reproductive isolation (i.e. put two together and they can't/won't breed).

    There's also the possibility, once you have a single intelligent species, of a few genes with large effects taking over. For example, all dog breeds are roughly the same and have the same intelligence, but it's possible to get such different shapes because of a few mutations in a few genes that have extraordinarily large effect. All you need is some sort of isolation—geographic is best, but cultural or just anatomical will do (I don't see a halfling woman surviving pregnancy with a half-human-half-halfling child)—and eventually there will be reproductive isolation.

    TL;DR:
    Multiple intelligent species/subspecies/breeds/races isn't all that far-fetched. It's unlikely, but so is the evolution of intelligence in the first place.
    Author of The Auspician's Handbook and The Tempestarian's Handbook for Spheres of Power.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lateral View Post
    Well, of course I'm paranoid about everything. Hell, with Jeff as DM, I'd be paranoid even if we were playing a game set in The Magic Kiddie Funland of Perfectly Flat Planes and Sugar Plums.
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    EvilClericGuy

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    I like the thought of cultural and biological flexibility myself.

    For example for example you could have Kappa, Bogart and Goblins. All three are just goblins but one lives in the woods, one a ruin and one in the water.

    Then you could have one kind of vampire but with so many different combinations of possible abilities and vulnerabilities that is is plausible to the man in the streat that their are dozens of different breeds

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Quote Originally Posted by Blightedmarsh View Post
    I like the thought of cultural and biological flexibility myself.

    For example for example you could have Kappa, Bogart and Goblins. All three are just goblins but one lives in the woods, one a ruin and one in the water.
    Don't forget Kobolds if you're going that route.

    Then you could have one kind of vampire but with so many different combinations of possible abilities and vulnerabilities that is is plausible to the man in the streat that their are dozens of different breeds
    American Vampire is one of my favorites because of the fact there are so many different breeds of vampires all existing on the same world and they play it the correct way.

    Edit:

    And Jeff's post is definitely one of my favorite posts I've read in a good long while on anything.
    Last edited by Tanuki Tales; 2012-09-16 at 10:16 AM.

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    When I first started up my campaign world (which is still and always evolving) I unloaded the "All Myths are True" specifically in regards to deities. It ended up becoming a convoluted mess pretty quickly.

    I think there is definitely something to your "If the world is large enough" statement. My world is admittedly quite small, so that may have had something to do with the problem. I ran into a situation where the two PC clerics worshipped vastly different deities from different pantheons and the NPCs in my town were set with another completely different pantheon and deity. The whole thing became messy and I ended up just throwing that out the window and creating my own pantheon (though I built it largely around deities that myself and my players already had a fondness for, and there is some blatant expies in there.

    As far as monsters and fantasy kitchen sink, I'm sort of on the fence there. The only creature I've ever placed an active "no" on is catfolk. I used to have a gaming group where half of them would only ever play catfolk if I hadn't, and no one else (myself included) wanted to deal with a party of cats. The humanoid races generally have their own kingdoms, or at very least cities within human kingdoms. If a creature doesn't exist in my world, it's more likely because I never thought to use the creature than anything else.
    Last edited by joe; 2012-09-17 at 12:45 AM.

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Quote Originally Posted by Troll Brau View Post
    And Jeff's post is definitely one of my favorite posts I've read in a good long while on anything.
    Why thank you. Mind if I (extended) sig this?
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lateral View Post
    Well, of course I'm paranoid about everything. Hell, with Jeff as DM, I'd be paranoid even if we were playing a game set in The Magic Kiddie Funland of Perfectly Flat Planes and Sugar Plums.
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    EvilClericGuy

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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    From a purely mechanical point of view there is the idea of applying size templates.

    So a goblin is a goblinoid with a small template, with the meduim sized template its a hobgoblin and with the large template its a bugbear. Expanding this you could say that:

    a halfling is a human with a small sized template.
    a goliath is a human with a large template.
    a dwalf is an orgre with a medium template.
    a gnome is an elf with a small template.

    From an in universe perspective this could be said to be the result of recesive genetics on isolated or endogomous population. IRL there are actual tribes of pygmees, the Massi Mari realy are that tall and we in the UK play host to the world highest percentage of redheads; it is not that far fetched.

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    Ettin in the Playground
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    Default Re: All Myths are True: For better or worse.

    Quote Originally Posted by Jeff the Green View Post
    Why thank you. Mind if I (extended) sig this?
    Go right ahead.

    Quote Originally Posted by Blightedmarsh View Post
    From a purely mechanical point of view there is the idea of applying size templates.

    So a goblin is a goblinoid with a small template, with the meduim sized template its a hobgoblin and with the large template its a bugbear. Expanding this you could say that:

    a halfling is a human with a small sized template.
    a goliath is a human with a large template.
    a dwalf is an orgre with a medium template.
    a gnome is an elf with a small template.

    From an in universe perspective this could be said to be the result of recesive genetics on isolated or endogomous population. IRL there are actual tribes of pygmees, the Massi Mari realy are that tall and we in the UK play host to the world highest percentage of redheads; it is not that far fetched.
    That's actually an idea I'm following right now. Small amount of actual creatures and races at the beginning of things that either were knowingly warped into something new or slowly "evolved" into something new overtime. Add on a few new things either popping up or being made as time passes on as well, then having them warped or changed and I can see a more organic, if still varied, bestiary at a DM's and group's finger tips.

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