That harbor inlet looks like the cross-section of a vagina
Map Thread
>land tool
I never realized that, because the water has borders while land doesn't
What do you mean?
"the setting does not speak english" is utterly meaningless, because the main language will end up being translated into english anyway.
so what sounds old timey in english will be the equivalent of old timey [main language]. So You translate exatly as much as the characters speaking only the main language would understand.
No one would understand what "London" means nowadays, but people could understand "Westham".
Similarly in my setting
-i left "Twoville", "Millbridge" etc translated,
-"Caldsteadt" and "Isquillborg" semi translated in old english,
-while "Hanud'uhnäd" is in a foreign language, and the meaning in dwarven is explained in the description, same with "Minnuialelei" and "Tinnelei"
-while "Aretiel" and "Venea" are just names reminescent of one language or the other
Kek, you're not wrong
Yes, the face door does tell riddles, but now it's pulling a real doozy on us and is asking for a "shepherds pie"
One of the towns in my setting, Penlac is rather small but important thanks to it being situated right next to one of the springs that feeds into the Regic River System
The ways your bodies of water are different colours and divided by borders makes it difficult to figure out. If Alderon and The Abyssal Expanse are different colours does that mean Bal'Gharn is also a different ocean?
Here's a first pass on my current DnD campaign region. Part of a larger map that is in piss poor shape right now.
Older map I made. Added some color in post to get a rough idea of what it'd look like.
Said piss poor map...
And, because I'm a piece of shit, here's another map from last year's campaign.