Jul 10, 2022 7:49 am
IN AETALTIS, YOUR CULTURE REPRESENTS HOW
(and often where) you were raised. It’s the foundation of your values, desires, and personality. It also sets the stage for how you think about other cultures, the things you find attractive or offensive, and even your loyalties.
LINEAGE AND CULTURE
As with many fantasy settings, lineage and culture are tightly intertwined in the World of Aetaltis. A person of any lineage can come from any culture, but most Aetaltan lineages are closely associated with one or two particular cultures.
The following is a list of lineages and their common cultures. If you encounter a member of one of these lineages while traveling around the Amethyst Sea, you’d probably assume a person is a member of the paired culture. If you don’t want to spend a lot of time picking a culture, the list below us a good way to make your selection.
BREAKING THE MOLD
As you read the culture descriptions, remember that they describe the norm for your culture. As you know, few adventurers fit the norm in any way. In fact, the average per- son from any culture, except perhaps a Deeplander, would never
choose to become an adventurer. You decision to go adventuring already sets you apart, and it’s likely you break the mold in other ways as well.
The culture description suggests how someone of your culture typically behaves, but don’t feel locked into those traits. You may choose to fully embody what people expect of someone from your culture in some ways, but in others, you might be unusual.
By defining what "normal" is for a culture, and then thinking about how your personality fits or diverges from the norm, it unlocks a world of storytelling possibilities. For instance, if you were born an Icewalker but you love to read books, how did that come about? What happened in your life to set you on a path so different from your friends and neighbors? Was this unusual trait the thing that inspired you to become an adventurer? Or was it just one more thing in a long list of things that drove you to explore the world beyond your home?
Of course, you don’t have to be unusual. Except for the adventuring part, perhaps you are the embodiment of every stereotype, and by the Enaros, you’re proud of it! Why shouldn’t a Dalelander halfling take pride in their tradition of hospitality? And what drothmal Icewalker doesn’t revel in the blessings of Droth? In the end, it is all up to you.
(and often where) you were raised. It’s the foundation of your values, desires, and personality. It also sets the stage for how you think about other cultures, the things you find attractive or offensive, and even your loyalties.
LINEAGE AND CULTURE
As with many fantasy settings, lineage and culture are tightly intertwined in the World of Aetaltis. A person of any lineage can come from any culture, but most Aetaltan lineages are closely associated with one or two particular cultures.
The following is a list of lineages and their common cultures. If you encounter a member of one of these lineages while traveling around the Amethyst Sea, you’d probably assume a person is a member of the paired culture. If you don’t want to spend a lot of time picking a culture, the list below us a good way to make your selection.
BREAKING THE MOLD
As you read the culture descriptions, remember that they describe the norm for your culture. As you know, few adventurers fit the norm in any way. In fact, the average per- son from any culture, except perhaps a Deeplander, would never
choose to become an adventurer. You decision to go adventuring already sets you apart, and it’s likely you break the mold in other ways as well.
The culture description suggests how someone of your culture typically behaves, but don’t feel locked into those traits. You may choose to fully embody what people expect of someone from your culture in some ways, but in others, you might be unusual.
By defining what "normal" is for a culture, and then thinking about how your personality fits or diverges from the norm, it unlocks a world of storytelling possibilities. For instance, if you were born an Icewalker but you love to read books, how did that come about? What happened in your life to set you on a path so different from your friends and neighbors? Was this unusual trait the thing that inspired you to become an adventurer? Or was it just one more thing in a long list of things that drove you to explore the world beyond your home?
Of course, you don’t have to be unusual. Except for the adventuring part, perhaps you are the embodiment of every stereotype, and by the Enaros, you’re proud of it! Why shouldn’t a Dalelander halfling take pride in their tradition of hospitality? And what drothmal Icewalker doesn’t revel in the blessings of Droth? In the end, it is all up to you.