Campaign Setting: Difference between revisions
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In [[role-playing games]], a '''Campaign Setting''' is the setting in which a campaign takes place. Shocking. | In [[role-playing games]], a '''Campaign Setting''' is the setting in which a campaign takes place. Shocking. | ||
A Campaign Setting is crucial to a good role-playing game, because it [[fluff|fluffs]] out the game, lending meaning to the dice rolls and spread sheets. | |||
Plenty of role-playing game systems will come with one or more settings pre-made for gaming groups to use, to take some cognitive load off of prospective [[GM|GMs]], and thereby make it easier for people to jump in (and thus make it easier for people to justify buying more books). | |||
Or a GM can design their own, doing research, world building, culture bashing to make a unique setting (they never are) and going so far as to make maps and customized figurines. | |||
A campaign setting can have many scales, from galaxies, down to a single neighborhood. A well-crafted setting immerses the players, making them care about fabricated places and [[NPC|people]] that only exist on paper. | A campaign setting can have many scales, from galaxies, down to a single neighborhood. A well-crafted setting immerses the players, making them care about fabricated places and [[NPC|people]] that only exist on paper. | ||
== Examples == | == Examples == | ||
* [[Setting:Unified Setting|The Unified Setting for /tg/]] | |||
* [[Warhammer 40,000|The Grim Darkness of the 41st Millennium]]; [[Fantasy Flight Games]]' RPGs focus on specific zones in particular. | |||
* [[Warhammer Fantasy Battle|The Warhammer World]] | |||
* The [[World of Darkness]] | |||
* [[Reign of Steel]] | |||
* [[Endless Legend]] | |||
===[[Dungeons and Dragons]]=== | |||
Seriously, there's a ton of these guys, in every flavor imaginable, [[Dungeons & Dragons Campaign Settings|with their own big list]]. | |||
[[Category:Roleplaying]] | [[Category:Roleplaying]] | ||
Latest revision as of 14:48, 20 June 2023
In role-playing games, a Campaign Setting is the setting in which a campaign takes place. Shocking.
A Campaign Setting is crucial to a good role-playing game, because it fluffs out the game, lending meaning to the dice rolls and spread sheets.
Plenty of role-playing game systems will come with one or more settings pre-made for gaming groups to use, to take some cognitive load off of prospective GMs, and thereby make it easier for people to jump in (and thus make it easier for people to justify buying more books).
Or a GM can design their own, doing research, world building, culture bashing to make a unique setting (they never are) and going so far as to make maps and customized figurines.
A campaign setting can have many scales, from galaxies, down to a single neighborhood. A well-crafted setting immerses the players, making them care about fabricated places and people that only exist on paper.
Examples[edit | edit source]
- The Unified Setting for /tg/
- The Grim Darkness of the 41st Millennium; Fantasy Flight Games' RPGs focus on specific zones in particular.
- The Warhammer World
- The World of Darkness
- Reign of Steel
- Endless Legend
Dungeons and Dragons[edit | edit source]
Seriously, there's a ton of these guys, in every flavor imaginable, with their own big list.