Steampunk: Difference between revisions

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Some RPG settings that may be considered steampunk include the following:
Some RPG settings that may be considered steampunk include the following:
* [[Eberron]] (although it describes itself as "[[Dungeonpunk]]" and is based on industrialized magic rather than steam)
* [[Eberron]] (although it describes itself as "[[Dungeonpunk]]" and is based on industrialized magic rather than steam)
* [[DragonMech]]
* [[Dragonmech]]
* [http://www.fantasyflightgames.com/dd40.html Sorcery & Steam]
* [http://www.fantasyflightgames.com/dd40.html Sorcery & Steam]
* [[Inland_Empire|Inland Empire]]
* [[Inland_Empire|Inland Empire]]

Revision as of 00:23, 3 April 2016

Steampunk is kind of like this.

Steampunk is a genre of literature, movies, and RPGs made popular by (among other things) William Gibson's The Difference Engine. It usually features the following:

  • Gears
  • Airships
  • Steam
  • More gears

Some steampunk runs the more realistic, looking at things which were being developed in the 19th century and expanding on them like steam powered road vehicles and the Babbage's Analytical Engine. Others go for the blatantly fantastic with steam powered mechs, guns that shoot lightning, and colonies on Mars; this is called Gaslamp Fantasy, and mirrors the works of Jules Verne and the high-flying boys' adventure novels published before the turn of the 20th century.

The typical setting has many of the trappings of Victorian England, such as top hats, monocles, and parasols. It may also be reminiscent of the American Old West. Basically, anything between 1840 and 1900 is fair game.

Steampunk works often depict things like a society with a thin facade civility overlying the worship of science, which in turn is just a cover for the cold, ugly, and messy reality; or an aristocracy supported by technology maintained and operated by the poor. Sometimes Steampunk works are post-apocalyptic, incorporating period parody tropes used in settings like Fallout but tuned to Victorian society and ideology, or edging into Industrial Gothic ideals of inevitable ecological disaster brought about by the Industrial Revolution or the horrors of industrial warfare.


Problems

Like many things, Steampunk can be awesome if executed with care, attention to detail and the the nature of the technology and time frame that it is drawing upon. Alas, much of modern Steampunk work gets a lot of well-deserved hate for being only skin-deep, as lamented in the semi-viral music video, "Just Glue Some Gears On It (And Call It Steampunk)". Some fa/tg/uys have declared that we should dub this debris of the steampunk genre "cog fop" and move on to Dieselpunk, though there are risks of the process happening again to dieselpunk as well should it go mainstream.


Steampunk and /tg/

Some RPG settings that may be considered steampunk include the following:

At least three steampunk-inspired tabletop skirmish games exist:

Gallery