It's got more than gleaming beaches and palm trees, too, for those who don't know. |
The term is Failure of Imagination.
When You Don't Know What You Don't Know
For some context, Pablo was discussing how in fiction (but especially in RPGs), anytime there's an island chain you see the same set of archetypes play out time and time again. There's a pirate colony that looks like Tortuga, there's an island of cannibals, a lost ocean horror being worshiped as a god... and that's really it.
And sure, those things are interesting... but is that really the best our collective imaginations can come up with?
Shots fired, Captain... shots fired! |
That last one, by the by, first came up in Do Dwarves Surf? Tips For Diversifying Non-Human Fantasy Races... and it STILL gets me hate mail and salty comments on social media whenever someone brings it up.
This goes beyond the tendency we have to put gangs of sea reavers on archipelagoes, though; it's our tendency to just make assumptions about certain locations, or particular story beats, without stopping to examine them. To pause and ask ourselves, "Is this really all we can do with this? Or can we make it different?"
Because when you start making things different, that's when your imagination really gets room to play.
Barbarians Are Vikings, Bards Are Whiny, And So On...
Nine times out of ten, whenever I run into really fiery arguments about games it's not about the mechanics... it's always about people's assumptions regarding what games are (and in a lot of opinions, what games have to be) from a flavor and story perspective.
And some of the most heated conversations I've seen have been about barbarians and bards, as well as the cultures that produce them. As an example.
For those of you not familiar with Alvin Dragonsborn, he's the crown prince of a matriarchal fantasy queendom. He's had the best teachers since he was born, he knows his courtesies, and he enjoys playing chess along with reading treatises on philosophy. But when he has a sword in his hand, the Rage boils up from within, and that's when the dragon within him wakes.
He is, in many respects, the exact opposite of what many players think of when they think of barbarian characters. Rather than being raised out in the wilds by a tribal society, brutalized from a young age and ignorant to the ways of the civilized world, he is a product of the highest levels of civilization. But does that preclude him from the well of Rage that bubbles within him, or the skill and speed he fights with? Absolutely not... but failure of imagination often leads people to declare that princes can't be barbarians because it is not something they're capable of imagining.
The same goes for bards. When a majority of players picture bards, they think of Jaskier from The Witcher. You're always in fancy performing clothes, a little foppish, constantly trying to get laid, very pretty, and sometimes useful, but outside of being a face you're not a help. However, a bard could just as easily be a bellowing half-orc drill sergeant, howling out war cries and shouting marching tunes to keep his soldiers on-task. I've played such a character, and it took most of the table hours to realize he wasn't a really crafty barbarian with an abnormal number of Knowledge skills.
As I said earlier, there is nothing wrong with going with the expected attributes of a class, or the assumptions that come with a particular type of setting. However, if you want to step outside of the usual, it sometimes pays to lean back, and give your imagination room to breathe. So the next time you think about a setting, or a character concept, push on those boundaries and see what comes out. Does the gleaming society of magic-infused technology exist in the far north, for example, making the stereotype of northmen being that they're learned and scholarly instead of brutish warriors in this setting? Do you only find dragons on volcanic islands, making those of draconic heritage more likely in such areas, driving out pirates that might try to ply their trade there? Are orcs known as traders and merchants, and goblins as tinkerers, while elves are seen as disorganized bands of raiders and gnomes are creatures of spite and malice?
There's no right way... just see which direction your imagination goes in.
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That's all for this week's Moon Pope Monday.
Hopefully you found this term useful!
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"Rogue" that was a cute "Living Doll with a Stuffie" and built for Social investigation and was adept at using performance to render a foe flat footed as a swift action. nobody knew she was a rogue and everyone assumed she was a bard and expected her to buff using her ventriloquism.
ReplyDeleteI play a dwarven islander.
ReplyDeleteBarbarian/monk.
Culturally he is based on Maori.
He is covered in tattoos.
Instead of a mountain forge they have a volcano where they make volcanic glass into weapons.
I did a Carribean campaign but I tried a lot of variants similar to what you mentioned. The halflings in the area had allied with a group of Hadozee (the flying apes from 3.5 D&D and created a very laid-back island home famed for its cooking and rum.
ReplyDeleteThe main human culture was a melding of a Western-European refugee society (fleeing an empire building) and a native Mesoamerican culture rebounding after a nasty undead apocalypse (the previous dominant civilization indulged in human sacrifice and reanimated the victims as servants). The resulting blend gave the culture an interesting flair. Even the gods melded , with gods like Cayden Caelean becoming known as Two Rabbit, a Mesoamerican god of drunkenness.