Do people actually question this stuff? Anyone I've played with just takes monsters for granted.
Andrew Bell
>"Hey GM where do mythological animals come from in your setting?" The titans made them, just like everything else. That's why they are pissed off at all the "divine races" that joined with the titans' children and tore apart and imprisoned the titans.
Connor Cox
>"Hey GM where do animals come from in your setting?"
Jace Campbell
>"Hey GM where do mythological animals come from in your setting?" You see, when a mythological mom and a mythological dad love each other very, very much...
Logan Young
I mean... that's actually not too far off in some myths.
Carter Cook
>"Hey GM where do mythological animals come from in your setting?" Your character doesn't know that. But you could always try and find out...
Brody Parker
>not having an analogue to Echidna, Mother of Monsters in your setting
That's where not-Typhon comes in.
Oliver Gomez
That one bard from that 2003 picture series.
Ethan Martin
The Man, the Myth, the Legend.
Ethan Torres
>"Hey GM where do mythological animals come from in your setting?"
80% The Fey did it. Other 20% one of the gods threw a curse or blessing out.
Dominic Long
10/10 setting. Would play the vanilla human straight man and set everyone else up for shenanigans.
It is if you enjoy it, /d/. ___________________________________________ ############################################################################################ FATAL ERROR in action number 1 of Alarm Event for alarm 1 for object obj_en_fleet:
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The Siege Dogs They like stealing. Oh Fuck Steeling
Thomas Cooper
I wouldn't mind making a centaur desu
Robert Sanchez
>"Hey GM, where do mythological animals come from in your setting?" I usually say that ancient magical relics of power have a tendency to leak over time, and monstrous beasts sometimes result from unions between normal animals that whelp near the magical fallout.
It sounds like you have incredibly boring players; I feel sorry for you.
Asher Sanchez
What the fuck is that?
Jordan Jackson
I actually did this once. But only because many creatures had been experimented on by an alchemy-obsessed civilization, and some of them escaped into the wilderness, and passed their omni-fertility to their descendants.
It's a recessive trait that pops up every few generations, along with scent-markers that make them appealing even to other species, even humans, which is where beastmen come from.
Adam Foster
It looks remarkably like it should be in a dark room plaintively whispering D-Daddy.
Jayden Anderson
Have emotion...
Brandon Hernandez
This is almost literally how it works in the xanth series. There are literally magic love springs scattered throughout the setting that cause the next two things to drink from it to fuck and produce a child, no matter what they are.
There are a lot of centaurs in this setting.
Kevin Butler
The angels made them.
Well, if we want to be technical, the angels of the angels of the angel made them. The angels of the angel made the sapient races. The angel was responsible for the world.
Jonathan Phillips
>"You mean... they have SEX? Just out in the open?"
Evan Long
>Do people actually question this stuff? Yes, there are some people autistic enough to ask why shit like chimera, harpies, and centaurs exist, in a fantasy setting where magic and gods not only exist, but are common enough for people to recognize and interact with it the same way most people do with electricity.
So if you don't take the time to map out the intricate details of how these creatures came to be, they'll swear up and down that the setting is shit, the GM (i.e. you) is shit, and how they'd know how to make a proper setting and yet, curiously, they never fucking do.
It's generally best to ignore them or to direct them to an article on wikipedia, otherwise they'll just derail your game for hours on end asking about the most inane shit about the monster that you set in front of them that isn't even going to survive the encounter.
Josiah Rodriguez
Considering how many of the classic monsters arose because Zeus couldn't keep his toga zipped, and how most of the rest were titan-spawn, explanations shouldn't be tough.
Also, most fantasy worlds are so old that even the elves have gone through enough generations to have forgotten the dawn era and its fecundity. As such, the answer is that no one really knows.
Angel Parker
I recently started reading up on a game called Adventurers, Conquerors, Kings. In that game there are rules for mages to breed abominations combining different creatures and is implyed in many monster descriptions that they are the creation of the ancient evil empire from the past that continued to breed even as their masters disappeared.