Originally posted by Heavy Arms
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Originally posted by AnubisXy View Post
I mostly agree. I expect most of them would end up joining the Red Talons. There might be a few who end up joining other Tribes due to some reason - maybe the lupus ended up spending a bit of time in towns before its First Change and joined the Bonegnawers. Maybe the wolf was part of a pack that was semi-familiar with humans in a positive way and joins the Children of Gaia. Or they just really like to travel so they joined the Striders. For many Tribes though, their focus is definitely more human oriented (Fianna, Black Furies, Glasswalkers, and some others) so you'll probably end up with a slightly convoluted backstory as to why the lupus ended up joining that particular Tribe.
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Originally posted by Knightingale View PostI think you're right. Yeah, you gave me an idea actually. In my interpretation of the verbs for the Tribes as shown in the preview, the Red Talons ended up being a "defensive Tribe" due to them having the verb of "ward" associated with them. So maybe Red Talons are still a Tribe with a lot of Lupus because their main-thing is "protecting wild places" or "protecting nature" or something along those lines. But as you say in this new version most Garou-Tribes are Homid-first and there are a few Tribes Lupus mostly happen to become a part of like the Red Talons.
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Originally posted by Ana Mizuki View Post
This is assuming they want any tribe to be that tied to the idea of lupus: Remember, the whole concept is that ANYONE can be a member of ANY tribe. So having Red Talons be flagged as lupus would go against it.
Setting Over. Ruin = Very Yes.
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Originally posted by Ana Mizuki View PostRemember, the whole concept is that ANYONE can be a member of ANY tribe.
It is just that certain totems had specific criteria that would cause them to automatically or conditionally reject certain Garou. Griffin would not accept any homids - dead stop, no exceptions. Fenris would not accept any Garou who was cowardly in any way.
It was just unclear whether certain requirements were a result of the totem or whether the tribal culture caused the rejections. Would Pegasus not accept male homids and lupus, or was it just because the Furies wouldn't allow it? Was the need for Pure Breed 3 a requirement of Falcon or Silver Fang culture? If a Garou was phycially puny but not cowardly, would Fenris reject the runt or is it the Get who would kick him out? Did you really need to have Native American ancestry to be accepted by the Wendigo spirit, or is that more a cultural thing within the tribe? Different STs would come down on different sides.
There was nothing to prevent a character from having a background of descended from the Silver Fangs but because they were now only Pure Breed 2, they were inducted into the Fianna instead. Or that you were a Lost Cub found first by the Get of Fenris, and they liked you enough to allow you to join and then later in the chronicle you found out that one of your parents was from Bone Gnawer stock. It was just that relatively few players or STs used these kind of character concepts. Likewise, there really was no problem in saying that besides this strong strain of Fianna on the western edge of Eurasia (that we all know best) there are much smaller - but equally Fianna/Children of Stag - bastions in this valley in Mongolia or along this river in Central Asia, or this National Park in India.
Therefore if you want to show that tribes are cultic devotions to specific Incarna and that actual genetic lineage is less important, you don't need to do anything to change the setting except... include more character examples that are like that. And perhaps qualify or introduce an official stance on certain restrictions being cultural or totemic. That would accomplish the same ostensible objectives while not invalidating canon.
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Originally posted by MrNatas View PostMy statements are more venting frustration that our niche game of being a werewolf isn't being catered to because the lead designer and IP holder doesn't care to do. I have nowhere to go to be mad expect screaming into a void. So, we are here now.
Originally posted by Ana Mizuki View PostThis might be just my own pet peeves, but if a character in a -werewolf- book where the werewolves have 5 forms has only a description of 2/5 of the forms, I feel they could have been a mage NPC and such. But this is just me liking the wolf aspect more XD
From an accessibility standpoint, describing non-human forms is extremely difficult to find the sweet spot between too little information to the point of it feeling pointless and redundant (esp. with wild wolves where coat variance is very subtle for the most part), and too much information where I'm basically including a 20 page primer on canine body posture interpretation in the middle of a game a lot of people just want to pick up and play.
Personally, I would love to see more about wolf behavioral cues in the books because I'd rather describe my wolf-shifters in a more natural fashion while playing and know the other players will understand what it means, instead of having to just say, "The lighter than average classic coated timber wolf's posture looks pensive."
But I do get why a book meant for a wider audience doesn't cater to that.
I know, but it amuses me how -lupus- is the legacy thing kept when even on this forum you get people demanding any lupus player to play basically a realistic wolf who cannot speak a human language to even play one. And then he does nothing with it even though a reboot would be a GREAT chance to adjust the breed.
Though I doubt W5 is going to help if it goes too far into, "just play humans in wolf shapes."
Originally posted by Ana Mizuki View PostThis is assuming they want any tribe to be that tied to the idea of lupus: Remember, the whole concept is that ANYONE can be a member of ANY tribe. So having Red Talons be flagged as lupus would go against it.
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Originally posted by Black Fox View PostTherefore if you want to show that tribes are cultic devotions to specific Incarna and that actual genetic lineage is less important, you don't need to do anything to change the setting except... include more character examples that are like that. And perhaps qualify or introduce an official stance on certain restrictions being cultural or totemic. That would accomplish the same ostensible objectives while not invalidating canon.
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Originally posted by Heavy Arms View PostI think part of the problem is that the readers are humans. All the readers are going to have some level of familiarity with how we visually describe people, and most readers are going to be able to interpret a bunch of cultural cues in a visual description of a person. Most people aren't students of lupine communication in the same way. If I described a wolf as seeming to always have his tail up in excitement but canted slightly to the left, can I trust my readers to know what that says about their personality, or do I need to explain it? Do I have room to explain it for every character I describe given writing NPCs in TTRPG books tends to come with a strict word budget?
From an accessibility standpoint, describing non-human forms is extremely difficult to find the sweet spot between too little information to the point of it feeling pointless and redundant (esp. with wild wolves where coat variance is very subtle for the most part), and too much information where I'm basically including a 20 page primer on canine body posture interpretation in the middle of a game a lot of people just want to pick up and play.
Personally, I would love to see more about wolf behavioral cues in the books because I'd rather describe my wolf-shifters in a more natural fashion while playing and know the other players will understand what it means, instead of having to just say, "The lighter than average classic coated timber wolf's posture looks pensive."
But I do get why a book meant for a wider audience doesn't cater to that.
Also, yes, it is great seeing people be more open to playing lupus. Though if the lupus breed is a sidebar in the character creation section, we might have an issue.
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Originally posted by Ana Mizuki View PostI generally feel the issue is that players are expected to not understand this and so everything is now open because it is easier than showing examples of tribe switching.
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Originally posted by Black Fox View PostThere was nothing to prevent a character from having a background of descended from the Silver Fangs but because they were now only Pure Breed 2, they were inducted into the Fianna instead. Or that you were a Lost Cub found first by the Get of Fenris, and they liked you enough to allow you to join and then later in the chronicle you found out that one of your parents was from Bone Gnawer stock.
Originally posted by Black Fox View PostIt was just that relatively few players or STs used these kind of character concepts.
Originally posted by Black Fox View PostLikewise, there really was no problem in saying that besides this strong strain of Fianna on the western edge of Eurasia (that we all know best) there are much smaller - but equally Fianna/Children of Stag - bastions in this valley in Mongolia or along this river in Central Asia, or this National Park in India.
I totally see how Fianna culture came to America with settlers. Or to Australia. But defining a small Fianna settlement having been far removed from the Fianna, yet develop similarly just for the sake of creating a kind of snowflake character is to much. If I wanted to mix heritages, travelling packs making babies along the way and the like seems enough. Backgrounds/Merits like Ancestors, Spirit Ally and such not withstanding to actually 'teach' a "fish out of the water" the tribal culture...
Originally posted by Black Fox View PostAnd perhaps qualify or introduce an official stance on certain restrictions being cultural or totemic.
"Sure, we could bring this guy into the tribe. He seems to know our ways well enough. But we won't. Why? Don't you remember when my grand father was this sept's Master of the Rite he brought in a guy who was equally in tune with out culture. In a daring invocation he persuaded to tribal totem not to intervene and the Rite of Passage was successful - but only a decade later that garou danced the Spiral and his betrayal cost the lives of two packs. The sept needed decades to recover. And that is why. We don't repeat out mistakes."
As a LARP ST I occasionally have players who want to play lost cubs without the baptism of fire and therefore not tribe claiming them at the beginning of their character game. And I repeatedly have to tell the players of those garou of rank, especially the sept offices, that they can't just start a Rite of Passage and see what totem picks the cub, for various reasons.
Tribal totems aren't omnipresent or all-perceiving. If you invoke the Rite of Passage and call upon multiple tribal totems for you might offend them.
It is up to the garou to educate the lost cubs and that includes to tell them about the tribes and make a decision or let the cub make a decision to what tribe it wants to try to join. But in any case the garou of rank owe their tribemates and tribal totems due diligence when it come to new members. That holds true for the Rite of Passage just as it holds true for the Rite of Adoption.
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Originally posted by heinrich View PostThat is something I find really silly. While it is totally okay for a person from those areas far away from where Fianna normally live to be parent of a Fianna (I mean, they are living their emotions). But to accept that there is a parallel fianna culture that happened to develop without cultural exchange is beyond my suspension of disbelieve.
I totally see how Fianna culture came to America with settlers. Or to Australia. But defining a small Fianna settlement having been far removed from the Fianna, yet develop similarly just for the sake of creating a kind of snowflake character is to much. If I wanted to mix heritages, travelling packs making babies along the way and the like seems enough. Backgrounds/Merits like Ancestors, Spirit Ally and such not withstanding to actually 'teach' a "fish out of the water" the tribal culture...
Furthermore, Garou are not isolated from one another like human cultures can be. Garou who worship Stag in Persia could still have Moon Bridge access to other septs controlled by Fianna thousands of miles away. It is not even that hard for tribe members from low ranking septs to somehow travel by hopping through different sept Moon Bridges and even regularly attended festivals at Tara in Ireland for the big Fianna get togethers. They have the same access to the Tribal Homelands, and other umbral passage ways like Moon Paths that can connect them together. Likely certain Ancestors that go back thousands of years and therefore the same Ancestor spirit might be in contact with members of the tribe who are very far from each other. Not to mention there have been Concolations of the entire Garou Nation stretching back from thousands of years. Connections can be made by Stone Age Garou that are impossible for contemporary Stone Age humans. The same limits don't apply.
It's not that they develop similar institutions independently, or kept certain institutions pure and unchanging from the Stone Age. I agree that would not be plausible, but we don't need to go down that route. We already have all the reasons on why these people actually have contact with one another despite being far distant from each other.
Certainly the Irish diaspora (and earlier migrations of Celtic peoples) explains how Fianna from Ireland and Celtic Western Europe would move them and their families around the world. But there is no reason why very early Garou in the ancient stone age could independently join a cult of Stag and learn that there were many other children of Stag and become in contact with them.
If you go back far enough in time, there are no Celtic peoples. The cult of Stag must predate the Celts by thousands of years. The defining culture of the Fianna (or any other tribe) MUST be separate from the human culture of the homids and their kinfolk, even if for historical reasons a particular human culture became dominant among many of its homids. It is actually no different from saying there are Fianna among the French and northern Italians because at one time those areas were Celtic, even though nowadays the homids who live there are Italians or French instead of being a recognizably Celtic people like the Irish, Welsh, or Bretons.
Now for the purposes of keeping continuity and canon, I wouldn't want to make these exception so prevalent that it effectively changes our understanding of the tribes. Those tribes that are often defined by close associations with human cultures should still keep those associations. It's just about opening up enough exceptions that it makes the point the culture of each tribe should be about its Totem and the tribe's devotions around it and its brood, and is not primarily about any human culture. "Fianna" of the Mesolithic, at a time when most of Ireland is buried under glaciers and probably has no Fianna there at all, shouldn't be recognizable as Irish stereotypes, but they should be recognizable as cultic devotees to a Stag god. The fact that many of these Children of Stag will eventually move westwards and take over much of Western Europe doesn't mean other members could stay behind in various other places, or even migrate elsewhere.
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Originally posted by heinrich View PostActually, I like that it is unclear. It gives more possibilities to the ST.
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Originally posted by Black Fox View PostI am not talking about the homids being Celts. I am talking about homids of whatever local culture still being followers of Stag, and thus recipients of Stag's instructions or requests, and their Garou culture (not the human culture of the homids) being informed by it. A spirit of Stag or its brood should be universal throughout the world. You don't get deer spirits (or rabbit or any other creature that may be part of that brood) acting different in parts of the world because the human culture is different.
Also, animal spirits of animals that not exist in a given region should not necessarily be present there. That some animal spirit exists, that in theory is part of Stags brood, in the African desert or amazon jungle is certainly something that occurs, but it is unclear how strong such a bond is. I mean, why would suck spirits be servants of a garou tribal incarnae and not a Bastet or Mokolé totem equivalent or other local yet powerful entity. Or are we believing that the 13 tribal totem broods are the only relevant spirit courts all around the world spirits belong to? I mean, Axis Mundi is also a Mage supplement and it certainly delivers this impression with its 13 chapters structure and not going into details of courts for celestines or naming other equivalent courts.
But I don't think this is how the spirit world should work.
Originally posted by Black Fox View PostFurthermore, Garou are not isolated from one another like human cultures can be. Garou who worship Stag in Persia could still have Moon Bridge access to other septs controlled by Fianna thousands of miles away. It is not even that hard for tribe members from low ranking septs to somehow travel by hopping through different sept Moon Bridges and even regularly attended festivals at Tara in Ireland for the big Fianna get togethers. They have the same access to the Tribal Homelands, and other umbral passage ways like Moon Paths that can connect them together. Likely certain Ancestors that go back thousands of years and therefore the same Ancestor spirit might be in contact with members of the tribe who are very far from each other. Not to mention there have been Concolations of the entire Garou Nation stretching back from thousands of years. Connections can be made by Stone Age Garou that are impossible for contemporary Stone Age humans. The same limits don't apply.
Moon Paths sure are a way, but they are also travel with dangers. I mean, Lune spirits patrol the Moon Paths to protect travels not because all is peachy along the way.
Tribal Homelands are, with the exception of the Children of Gaia one, accessible for Athro plus.
Common ancestors are a way, but still, one would need people with Ancestors background or Rite of summoning.
So, not to say you are wrong about the possibility. But I feel that the further time elapses the more likely it is that a sept far removed from other septs of the tribe would cease to exist, by being culturally assimilated by the tribe dominant in the area or by diverging from the culture of the common ancestors into something of their own. I mean, that is how Bone Gnawer and Glass Walkers eventually emerged.
And sure, there were Concolations, about the end of the Impergium and the consolidation of the tenets of Litany, by condensing all the stories and songs the participants deemed important. But were these meetings that happend ad-hoc? Or did the planning of these meeting take decades or more in planning and did the garou travel to the meeting places possibly for months and months?
Also, there is a qualitative difference between the Dawn Times and the medieval times. If we follow all WoD sources there was a time when Shroud and Gauntlet didn't exist yet and the Dreaming wasn't separated from the material world. Distances might have been a product of imagination back then. But as the Weaver grew stronger, maps cemented human believe which in turn cemented the world how it is today.
Originally posted by Black Fox View PostIt's not that they develop similar institutions independently, or kept certain institutions pure and unchanging from the Stone Age. I agree that would not be plausible, but we don't need to go down that route. We already have all the reasons on why these people actually have contact with one another despite being far distant from each other.
I mean the Fianna in Persia scenario is also one that would allow land travel. And while Australia in canon was shielded from the world until the Order of Reason removed that shield the Americas and Africa would have always been areas for garou to settle and keep in touch with their brethren in Europe and central asia. Same for the KotE setting.
But, WtA clearly states that the Hakken developed differently then the Shadowlords, despite the same tribal totem. And the Pure Ones did not have contact with the other tribes either.
Originally posted by Black Fox View PostCertainly the Irish diaspora (and earlier migrations of Celtic peoples) explains how Fianna from Ireland and Celtic Western Europe would move them and their families around the world. But there is no reason why very early Garou in the ancient stone age could independently join a cult of Stag and learn that there were many other children of Stag and become in contact with them.
If you go back far enough in time, there are no Celtic peoples. The cult of Stag must predate the Celts by thousands of years. The defining culture of the Fianna (or any other tribe) MUST be separate from the human culture of the homids and their kinfolk, even if for historical reasons a particular human culture became dominant among many of its homids. It is actually no different from saying there are Fianna among the French and northern Italians because at one time those areas were Celtic, even though nowadays the homids who live there are Italians or French instead of being a recognizably Celtic people like the Irish, Welsh, or Bretons.
Fianna legend (at least one of them) tells that the garou who later became Fianna followed the fair folk all the way to Tir Nan Og when humans (and possibly banality) drove them off. But it also tells, iirc, that this process took centuries and several septs along the way remained. These garou would also be Fianna. But my suspension of disbelieve doesn't reach so far as that I would think a Fianna sept have survived in Persia, even if the general area of Mesopotamia might have been the place where the garou who eventually became Fianna started their journey.
The chances that they were culturally assimilated just seems to high in my opinion.
Originally posted by Black Fox View PostNow for the purposes of keeping continuity and canon, I wouldn't want to make these exception so prevalent that it effectively changes our understanding of the tribes. Those tribes that are often defined by close associations with human cultures should still keep those associations. It's just about opening up enough exceptions that it makes the point the culture of each tribe should be about its Totem and the tribe's devotions around it and its brood, and is not primarily about any human culture. "Fianna" of the Mesolithic, at a time when most of Ireland is buried under glaciers and probably has no Fianna there at all, shouldn't be recognizable as Irish stereotypes, but they should be recognizable as cultic devotees to a Stag god. The fact that many of these Children of Stag will eventually move westwards and take over much of Western Europe doesn't mean other members could stay behind in various other places, or even migrate elsewhere.
I mean there is the Silver Fangs and from Blood Red Crest to Wyrmfoe there are lots of localised variants to the tribe. Sadly, they are never examined in depth. If one would go and say, there is a small group (like the Siberakh) that shares ancestry with the tribe that became the Fianna, okay. I can get that. I mean the Silver Fang houses also survived... well, some of them.
But the argument would be they share certain aspects, especially since the are followers of the same totem, but still somewhat different. But that is a case I make for any tribe always, because I feel there should be differences between two septs of Fianna, even if both are situated in Ireland, proper. If PCs travel to another sept there should be something interestingly different to what they know from other septs of the same tribe. If the sept is far removed geographically, then the differences should be more apparent (unless the garou settled there only recently and haven't had time to divert from the customs of their home septs, yet).
If W5 made changes in that direction, carefully and logically, I wouldn't mind.Last edited by heinrich; 11-14-2022, 04:25 PM.
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Originally posted by heinrich View PostWhy should spirits in a different part of the world not act differently - depending on local culture.
I don't understand what point you are trying to make. Human culture is irrelevant to these kind of spirits. Do people really think a deer spirit in Bohemia changed because at one point the people living there were Old Europe pre-IE peoples, then inhabited by Celtic peoples, then by Germanic peoples, and later by Slavic peoples? Or is it still just a deer spirit doing the things all deer do?
Originally posted by heinrich View PostI mean, why would suck spirits be servants of a garou tribal incarnae and not a Bastet or Mokolé totem equivalent or other local yet powerful entity. Or are we believing that the 13 tribal totem broods are the only relevant spirit courts all around the world spirits belong to? I mean, Axis Mundi is also a Mage supplement and it certainly delivers this impression with its 13 chapters structure and not going into details of courts for celestines or naming other equivalent courts.
But I don't think this is how the spirit world should work.
Certainly the spirits of the same animal could appear in multiple broods. We already have examples of that since multiple canon spirit broods have some kind of raven, crow or other corvid in that brood. They are not the exact same spirit since the game gives each a different name and different stats to them, but they are still essentially a raven spirit or crow spirit even if their specific nature means this kind are most often found in that brood or this other one. So it's not like all spirits 100% neatly line up in one specific brood only. I have no problem with that. But if that happens, I think the ST should have some explanation in mind.
Originally posted by heinrich View PostSo, not to say you are wrong about the possibility. But I feel that the further time elapses the more likely it is that a sept far removed from other septs of the tribe would cease to exist, by being culturally assimilated by the tribe dominant in the area or by diverging from the culture of the common ancestors into something of their own. I mean, that is how Bone Gnawer and Glass Walkers eventually emerged.
Nor are any tribes highly centralized armies of nation states. Most decisions are made at the sept level. There isn't some undisputed general at Tribe X declaring this other tribe must be wiped out in the area. Tribes being extirpated from certain regions make sense. But that doesn't mean no isolated tribal septs cannot survive on their own. They can form alliances, enter tributary status, and engage in other politics with local septs. There could even be an area with several septs allied together who have desperately fought off attempts to wipe them out.
I don't see how this is a problem. Just don't go overboard on it.
Originally posted by heinrich View PostThat is what I disagree on. If all the means of the garou were used in this way, then none of the tribe would have had relevant geographical ties. But that is not what Mark came up with all these decades ago, when he created WtA.
Likewise once the Eurasian tribes came to North America, they didn't divide all their lands into neat geographic boundaries, or decide that one tribe was going to be the American tribe. Instead they were mixed and matched all over the place like a patchwork quilt. I don't see the big issue of not saying some of that could happen in parts of the Old World.
Originally posted by heinrich View PostI mean the Fianna in Persia scenario is also one that would allow land travel. And while Australia in canon was shielded from the world until the Order of Reason removed that shield the Americas and Africa would have always been areas for garou to settle and keep in touch with their brethren in Europe and central asia. Same for the KotE setting.
But, WtA clearly states that the Hakken developed differently then the Shadowlords, despite the same tribal totem. And the Pure Ones did not have contact with the other tribes either.
And it gets very complicated when you go way back in time as you have many different authors trying to insert references to this tribe or that tribe at a time when it doesn't make sense to do so. And you have questions like how much did the Litany already exist for a common legal code among Garou as you did have major tribes separated from each other. How is that possible? The answer is that the original game authors didn't give this a whole lot of thought, and people will be piecing these things together and thus come up with different ideas.
The Hakken are an odd case because originally the Hakken were Shadow Lords. Caerns: Places of Power which introduced the Hakken clearly treated them as Shadow Lords. The author just wanted to given them a different name because he thought it would be good flavor text for the tribe's sept example being in Japan. Same thing for the Glass Walkers in Hong Kong. I believe it was only later in Revised that the game decided using a different name meant the Hakken really weren't Shadow Lords. It was just part of that edition's strange Orientalism as an attempt to create more game lines and produce more profits. So personally I ignore it as bad writing.
Originally posted by heinrich View PostWell, we don't know when which tribe was formally created. This might not even be something one can definitively date.
Fianna legend (at least one of them) tells that the garou who later became Fianna followed the fair folk all the way to Tir Nan Og when humans (and possibly banality) drove them off. But it also tells, iirc, that this process took centuries and several septs along the way remained. These garou would also be Fianna. But my suspension of disbelieve doesn't reach so far as that I would think a Fianna sept have survived in Persia, even if the general area of Mesopotamia might have been the place where the garou who eventually became Fianna started their journey.
The chances that they were culturally assimilated just seems to high in my opinion.
The Celtic peoples did not arrive in Ireland until 700 BC or so. The Fianna clearly existed before that. So did the Fianna just finally reach Ireland when their Celtic kinfolk did? If they did, their connections to Ireland perhaps is not as important as we think. If the Fianna predate the Celts arriving in Ireland, than perhaps their connection to the Celtic peoples aren't as important as we think. Nor did all Fianna cram into ships and went to Ireland. There were always Fianna on the continent. And if you are fine with that, I don't see how you can object to the idea that there could be pockets of Fianna elsewhere.
The human culture of the homids becomes assimilated. But the local Children of Stag don't just stop being Children of Stag. Yeah, you can easily rule that many such septs far away from other Children of Stag are eventually invaded, wiped out, and killed. But there's still plenty of room for exceptions if that is what the ST wants. Not all the Wends in Germany have been killed or assimilated. The Nordic peoples did not kill or assimilate all the Lapps. Tatars still retain their identity in Kazan and elsewhere in Russia. Ainu still live in Japan. The Zoroastrian faith still survives in Muslim Iran. The blonde haired, blue-eyed Kalash in Afghanistan/Pakistan are said to be the descendants of Greeks who arrived with Alexander the Great. But you think it's impossible for there to have been any Fianna septs that might have survived outside of Western Europe?
The simple fact is that the authors of the books have never done a good job at handling very old history and how that affects the tribes. (Not to mention odd beliefs that the Amazons were Greeks when the myths are very clear the Amazons were barbarians who fought the Greeks). For most STs that is not a big deal. But if you think seriously about it, you have to make a lot of decisions about how you are going to handle things. I think there is plenty of justification if STs want to introduce this odd tribe here or there as somehow surviving in a region where they are not identified with.
I like canon and try to keep to it as much as possible. But there are bits of canon that are just not thought out well, and I have no problem improving on canon in my chronicles when it annoys me too much. I try to keep to its spirit as much as possible. But frankly the games' authors have felt free to remove, change, or piss on canon whenever it was convenient for them to do so, so I'm in good company.
We may just need to agree to disagree. Thanks for the discussion.Last edited by Black Fox; 11-14-2022, 08:14 PM.
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