RSS
 

I Like Elves

06 Feb
Tolkien Elves

I like the Dresdencodak take on the Middle-earth elves (dresdencodak.tumblr.com)

I like elves. Specifically, I like the elves of Middle-earth, and in particular I like the fact that they were truly immortal; even their deaths merely meant they would be reborn back into the elven race [if I remember the Silmarillion correctly).

Most RPGs have elves as a long-lived race, but rarely are they truly immortal. I can’t recall the maximum ages of all the elves I’ve come across, but I know that in ACKS they have a maximum of roughly 200 years or so; but I much prefer elves as being this immortal race, that reach certain adult perfection and then never age, and are immune to normal diseases, dying only as a result of their wounds, if such are inflicted. For my next campaign, whenever and wherever that is, I want elves to be an immortal race– or at least a race that used to be immortal– because that is much more fascinating and interesting that simply a race that lives a generation or two longer than humans.

Imagine what a race like that would be like. How would it affect their progress? Slow it down? Allow them to achieve great accomplishments because they have the time to discover new technologies, to indulge lengthy research and experimentation? Would such a race eventually become corrupt, their egos overinflated by their obvious superiority over short-lived races, and would they use their superiority and long lives to conqueror other races, perhaps mistakenly thinking that they are doing them a favour?

Would their cities expand until they enveloped wide regions, spanning continents, but built in harmony with the natural world?

I would also like to have elves less inclined to arcane power, and more linked to divine power. Clerics rather than mages. I’d argue that Tolkien’s elves would be better suited as clerics anyhow, since they are closer to the ‘gods’ and many dwelt with or close to them. At least that’s one way to look at them.

I also like the idea of the elven race being less ‘good-guys’ and more the ‘bad-guys’ of a story. The corrupted elves. Maybe cursed too, by the gods, by other races, by their own misused powers.

I have an idea of Blighted Elves, corrupted by too much power, mutated and warped in body and mind. Also, Burning or Shining Ones, an idea I keep coming back to, which would be elves that have consumed so much power that they are literally burning up from the inside, their life-spans drastically reduced as a result. Elves that once had a vast empire that has since fallen into ruin; elves that enslaved the other races, until those races broke free by rebelling and fighting back; elves that stole their power from the gods, reducing these divine beings to mortals– albeit powerful mortals– and trapping that power, tapping into it to fuel the elves own magic.

Elves that vanished. Elves that are coming back, and bringing an eternal winter with them. Why? No idea. It just sounds interesting.

Anyway, I like elves, and I want to use them in more interesting ways than I used to.

Next Time: I Like Halflings!

 

 
6 Comments

Posted in RPG

 

Tags: , , ,

Leave a Reply

 

 
  1. Misha

    February 14, 2013 at 19:04

    I like your ideas with elves. I like them too, but think people stopped trying to be creative with them.

     
  2. Fantasy World-building: Longevity « M. Q. Allen

    February 11, 2013 at 04:15

    [...] I Like Elves (theskyfullofdust.co.uk) [...]

     
  3. Andrew

    February 7, 2013 at 04:40

    Dyson Logos has a back story in his game with the Kale, an elven empire everybody ganged up on. Might be worth a look. And Vornheim has winter elves, with sharp teeth. Not to suggest anything is derivative, but sources to spark further inspiration.

    One of the best things about gaming is that we can expand our imaginations and experience a broader range of fiction with a minimal investment. I love that. Go for whatever interpretation works best and feels most cool to you, and players will catch some of that enthusiasm most of the time. Keep up the good work!

     
  4. Chawunky

    February 7, 2013 at 02:05

    At the end of the day I like elves too. I guess they’re just part of my D&D mental furniture.

    B/X elves live for about 800 years (which I was always amused was a fact only brought up in a magic item description), which made them a little more relatable, as creatures that would bother to associate with other mortals at all.

    That said, I also appreciate the tradition of elves being forbidding and odd too, and imagine those in my campaign to start growing drawn, haggard, and bitter all of a sudden around 650 or so.

    “Better a demon’s wrath than an elf-crone’s notice.”

     
    • Andrew

      February 7, 2013 at 14:38

      With the deep goblins of the Breathing World, I gave them short lives. If they worship Dufell, their patron goddess, their lifespan doubles. If they are accepted as priesthood of Dufell and given powers by their goddess, they live until killed.

      It might be interesting to think of how choices they make for worship or energy manipulation change their lifespans–like the burning out you mention.