#ttrpg

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Sen H.h.s., Dan Cascone, Caryn DiMarco, Laura Lynn Horst, Michelle Y. Kim, Stephanie Lundeen, Derry Luttrell, Matt Morris, Collette Quach, Gina Susanna, Esther Wallace, Andrew White: Shining Kingdoms (2025, Paizo)

A worthy addition to your Golarion library

The Shining Kingdoms supplement for the Pathfinder setting of Golarion details the southeastern reaches of the continent of Avistan.

First, let's get the bad news out of the way: This book has a writeup of Andoran. For those of you who are unfamiliar with the setting, Andoran is basically a fantasy counterpart of "The United States of America, as portrayed in propaganda about the War of Independence and World War II" - as opposed to how the USA actually were at the time. Complete with Eagle Knights spreading "FREEDOM AND DEMOCRACY(TM)" around the world. This was a bad concept when the setting was first published, and while the authors did their best, there is only so much you can do to improve such a premise. I suppose this makes for a fine setting for those who can look beyond the premise (especially with the conflict of Cheliax heating …

Paizo Staff, James Case, Eren Ahn, Jeremy Blum, Alyx Bui: Pathfinder Lost Omens Tian Xia World Guide (P2) (2024, Paizo Inc.)

A worthy addition to Golarion

My main complaint about this book is that it is too short. But then again, how could it be otherwise?

This book covers Tian Xia, an entire continent for #Golarion , the "default" campaign setting for the #Pathfinder #TTRPG . Just like the default "Inner Sea" region is vaguely inspired by Europe and North Africa, so is Tian Xia inspired by Asia, and does its best to make it an interesting region to play in. But Tian Xia is several thousands of miles in diameter, and this book has a mere 302 - and thus, each region and country on this continent will only get the briefest of oversights. Which for a detail-oriented setting junkie like me is frustrating, to say the least.

The authors of the various regional writeups did try to make the most out of their word count. We get a decent idea of …

Wizards RPG Team: Journeys Through the Radiant Citadel (Hardcover, 2022, Wizards of the Coast)

An anthology of thirteen stand-alone adventures set in wondrous lands for the world's greatest roleplaying …

A good idea, but with not enough focus

I really do appreciate that the authors were trying to explore settings with a different perspective than the pseudo-European/North American cultural base used for most #DnD settings.

But since this 224 page book is split up between 13 adventures and 15 cultures, the glimpses we get of each culture is so frustratingly brief. As someone who wants their settings to come with lots of details, this would make it difficult for me to bring the cultures in question truly come alive. In lieu of further detail, it might have helped if they had spelled out which culture each setting is based on - in some cases it was fairly easy for me to guess, but in others I was unsure.

I also have to admit, I prefer running campaigns where the PCs largely stay in one particular region rather than traveling around - and when they do travel …

Keith Baker: Chronicles of Eberron (2022, Keith Baker Presents)

Useful for the hardcore Eberron fan

This book by @hellcowkeith@dice.camp is not a book that focuses on a specific topic and covers that topic in detail, like the assorted 3.5 books for Eberron did. It is best to see it as a collection of essays on a variety of niche topics - some of which are very niche, such two minor gnome subcultures.

Some of the chapters are broader in scope, and personally I found the chapter on the Overlords, The Dark Six, and the lore and folk-lore about undead the most useful. As an amateur folklorist, I especially appreciated the last one - to run good adventures about monsters, you should not only contemplate their stats, but also what the people within the world know about them, and what kinds of stories they tell.

Fans of Keith Baker's previous work will find plenty to like here, but I see this work to be …

James Maffie: Aztec philosophy (2015, University Press of Colorado)

In Aztec Philosophy, James Maffie shows the Aztecs advanced a highly sophisticated and internally …

Not the easiest book to read, but very much worth it!

It was probably a bit ambitious to read "Aztec Philosophy" as my very first book on philosophy, and thus it took me a long time to finish it. But it was very much worth it, since it allowed me to examine my own Eurocentric perceptions and assumptions on philosophy, metaphysics, cosmology, and so forth. And thus I recommend this book to anyone else who wants to gain a wider perspective on these matters.

Consciously or not (and mostly the latter), most people with an Eurocentric background (including those descended from European settlers) have internalized narratives about the world that are heavily based on both Greek philosophy and Christian theology - and this remains true even for those who have decided to reject Christianity. Aztecs - and other indigenous American people - have long lived in isolation from Europe, and have thus built up their own philosophies and metaphysics which …

Dave Allen, Jude Hornborg, Padraig Murphy, Alfred Nuñez, Clive Oldfied, Magnus Seter, Simon Wileman: Altdorf - Crown of the Empire (2021, Cubicle 7 Entertainment Ltd)

Altdorf is the capital city of the Empire and the birthplace of Sigmar Heldenhammer. It …

A good city book, but not a great one

I love detailed #ttrpg city books, and at 220 pages in length, Altdorf: Crown of the Empire for #WFRP certainly qualifies. As the capital city of the Empire, Altdorf is full of factions, power groups, NPCs with secrets, and lots of tiny neighborhoods - each with their own character, yet all feel plausible and believable for the setting of the Old World (well, maybe with a few exceptions - the "Popular League Against Nobility and Taxation (PLANT)" revolutionary group reads too much like something from the 20th century rather than the "German Renaissance" atmosphere the setting generally goes for).

So, why didn't I give this book full marks? It isn't for the bad puns in the German-sounding names - as a German WFRP player, I've learned to tolerate these. No, my problem is that this book doesn't really do enough to make its individual parts interconnected.

The setting …