![]() The adventures have been heavily based in the Forgotten Realms, but I fail to see how that's much of a change from the adventures all taking place in Greyhawk or the adventures all taking place in the Nentir Vale. The racial entries go into depth about Greyhawk and Dragonlance versions of these races, and the tiefling entry doesn't even match the tieflings of the Forgotten Realms, with the Sword Coast Adventurer's Guide providing explicit information on that front. The core books contain information from about half a dozen different settings. Contratulations on proving my point that the core books are not setting neutral & very heavily FR centric. that's an indefensible argument showing just how badly WotC sidelines even passing footnoted mention of how the non FR settings may differ when talking about FR specific stuff that may or may not be relevant to other settings. As to the completely irrelevant claim that FR may have drawn more players into d&d than eberron or Dark Sun. It's trivial to enjoy d&d yet dislike FR and there has been 17 pages largely devoted to explaining just that. Pretty much the only setting outside of the Realms with nearly as much prominence in the popular culture is Dragonlance, and seriously they should get on with bringing that one back already. Almost all of the things you've complained about are aspects found in the generic D&D settings of D&D 3E or D&D 4E or Greyhawk, and which were foundational to generic rulebooks and adventures stretching as far back as there has been a Dungeons & Dragons.Īnd I guarantee you far more people came to Dungeons & Dragons through the Forgotten Realms than they did through Eberron. ![]() If you're going to complain about the Forgotten Realms, I'm surprised you even play Dungeons & Dragons at all and not some other role-playing game because, bad news my friend, the Forgotten Realms at its core is Dungeons & Dragons. The fact of the matter is that the Forgotten Realms is the default setting now because, honestly, it pretty much has been for as long as it's been in publication, and them finally using it as the official setting is really just cutting out the middleman. It's serving the same purpose as Greyhawk in that respect, and it's one of the main reasons why it's viewed as one of the primary settings in a way that Eberron probably never will be given that it's so incredibly niche. The fact of the matter is that Forgotten Realms is being treated as the default for Dungeons & Dragons because earlier editions of Dungeons & Dragons were built to be the default world for the Forgotten Realms. One of the main reasons for this is that the Forgotten Realms is built more or less to be a fairly centralised Dungeons & Dragons setting. The Forgotten Realms has been getting the most campaign setting books in literally every edition it's been an available setting for, despite in one case being part of that edition for no more than two years before the next one came along. All Rights Reserved.And they're using Faerûn because it's basically been the unofficial major default campaign setting since at least the nineties, being the setting of a vast majority of the D&D video games, the largest proportion of the novels, and of course the vast majority of campaign setting sourcebooks. ©Hajime Isayama,Kodansha/"ATTACK ON TITAN"Production Committee. ![]() Please visit the official site for details about the game "Attack on Titan 2: Final Battle"īased on the manga "Shingeki no Kyojin" by Hajime Isayama originally serialized in the monthly BESSATSU SHONEN magazine published by Kodansha Ltd. If you have already purchased "Attack on Titan 2", you can play "Attack on Titan 2: Final Battle" by purchasing the additional content "Attack on Titan 2: Final Battle Upgrade Pack", which is scheduled to be released on July 5th, 2019. ![]() The content of "Attack on Titan 2" is included in "Attack on Titan 2: Final Battle", which is scheduled to be released on July 5th, 2019. This product is "Attack on Titan 2", not "Attack on Titan 2: Final Battle". Try your hand in operating the omni-directional mobility gear, maneuvering and flying through the sky to counter the Titans, and feel the thrill and satisfaction of battling giant opponents. Attack on Titan 2 is the gripping sequel to the action game based on the worldwide hit anime series "Attack on Titan."Įxperience the immense story of the anime alongside Eren and his companions, as they fight to save humanity from the threat of the deadly human devouring Titans. ![]()
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