Simlasa
Legendary Pubber
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- May 4, 2017
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I was reading one of Melan's blog posts where he ruminates about 'vanilla fantasy' and why it gets a bad rap... why there aren't more/better examples of it in OSR-land these days.
It's not like I am unfamiliar with the term (or 'bog standard fantasy' either), but he got me wondering.
I've chased after the 'weird' and 'gonzo' in my games for years. No elves, no dwarves, no fucking halflings, EVER!. But I purposefully set our school club's B/X game in a pretty 'vanilla' fantasy world, at least on the surface... and I'm finding it more of a challenge than I expected, in a good way.
For a start, many of my favorite sources of inspiration are just too damn bizarre for what I'm doing... and for the 12-13 yr olds exploring it.
So now I'm looking for the GREAT sources of vanilla fantasy... Tolkien is probably one... but I doubt Dragonlance or Game of Thrones or any of those other dodecathologies are. It's stuff I've avoided reading since... well, right after I finished Lord of the Rings I turned to Sword of Shannara... and was mighty disappointed.
Appendix N is full of fun stuff but is it 'vanilla'? Is Jack Vance considered 'vanilla' these days? Are fairy tales? Warhammer has a lot of the 'standard' elements, but is it 'vanilla'? Too gritty?
What are the delineating factors? Where is the line crossed?
And what are some good sources of OSR 'vanilla'? I'm afraid my game purchases have been pretty much devoid of it for some time.
It's not like I am unfamiliar with the term (or 'bog standard fantasy' either), but he got me wondering.
I've chased after the 'weird' and 'gonzo' in my games for years. No elves, no dwarves, no fucking halflings, EVER!. But I purposefully set our school club's B/X game in a pretty 'vanilla' fantasy world, at least on the surface... and I'm finding it more of a challenge than I expected, in a good way.
For a start, many of my favorite sources of inspiration are just too damn bizarre for what I'm doing... and for the 12-13 yr olds exploring it.
So now I'm looking for the GREAT sources of vanilla fantasy... Tolkien is probably one... but I doubt Dragonlance or Game of Thrones or any of those other dodecathologies are. It's stuff I've avoided reading since... well, right after I finished Lord of the Rings I turned to Sword of Shannara... and was mighty disappointed.
Appendix N is full of fun stuff but is it 'vanilla'? Is Jack Vance considered 'vanilla' these days? Are fairy tales? Warhammer has a lot of the 'standard' elements, but is it 'vanilla'? Too gritty?
What are the delineating factors? Where is the line crossed?
And what are some good sources of OSR 'vanilla'? I'm afraid my game purchases have been pretty much devoid of it for some time.
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