It's pretty certain it won't be. It's the sort of game were you have to get your key-press timings right if you want to jump across a pit, not make an Athletics check.
That's not to say your character won't acquire abilities that are based on the RPG, but they won't be rolling D20s to use them.
Which is fine, Spiderman, D&D, it's all just fantasy.
And of course, any writer will tell you that reality has much bigger coincidences than you can get away with in fiction writing.
I would prefer if these meaningless subdivisions just crawled away into a hole and died.
I'll allow "high fantasy" so long as there is also "low fantasy" on the list. If something has an antithesis it's meaning is easier to pin down. Otherwise it comes down to "is a copy of [insert name of more...
Yeah, but you clearly haven't been reading Fourth Wing. which is clearly the target market for this.
In the sense that your horse can be a friend. Anne McCaffery based her dragons on (slightly smarter) horses, and her modern imitators take their cue from that.
It's not much good if it can't...
The Jedi games had a strong story (railroad) and plenty of lore. And were more about traversal (puzzling out how to move around the environment) than hack and slash.
I wouldn't be surprised if they made the main character a rogue, and there was a stealth-em-up element as well.
No, they are very relevant for determining the baseline understanding of what "elf" means when people come in to D&D. A lot more people saw the movies than read the book (or read the D&D rules before playing).
One thing that I don't think has been mentioned is how long is the character expected to last? My campaigns typically last 1-2 years, so a player is going to be with the same character for a very long time. So they need to be very comfortable with them. And it also gives plenty of opportunity to...
I don’t think it’s unachievable. Have you looked at the Exodus tabletop rules? They are still recognisably 5e despite having none of the classes, species etc.
It’s from Tolkien, and goes all the way back to 1st edition.
And it’s made it into the PJ movies. Elrond recalls his vivid memories of things that happened a couple of thousand years ago for example. Therefore it’s part of the broader cultural perception of elves.
Fashions are not tied to magic or technology level. People can dress how you like whenever you like.
Aside from Eberron, the other place you are likely to find a lot of artificers is Calimshan, where you can assume they wear fantasy-Persian outfits.