How do you handle an "All myths are true!" modern fantasy setting in a way less stupid than Scion 2e, which does "All myths are true! Uh... you go figure out how that works with all kinds of paradoxes and contradictions, let alone what counts as a 'myth' in this world of mass media and rumors. Good luck."
It makes all actions, adventures, and achievements come across as totally pointless if the real win condition is to shill a myth enough that it gets retconned into reality. Planescape had this problem too.
Scion 2e: >Was Fionn mac Cumhaill a man or a giant? Was Aphrodite born from divine genitals cast into the sea or from Zeus and Dione? The answer is yes. Every mythology coexists with the others and the World spins on without a hitch. Where these mythic histories conflict, Gods and heroes collide with words and weapons. Cosmological certainty only matters insofar as a given God wants credit for deeds people attribute to his rival. Whether the earth quakes because Tuli’s dogs scratch at their fleas or because Poseidon throws temper tantrums, it still happens regardless of which explanation has more proponents, and the only cosmic outcome to an Overworld scuffle about it is which pantheon wins bragging rights. Most people assume that Tuli causes some earthquakes and Poseidon causes others with no particular need to choose just one legend. They pray for protection from a tremor to whichever God — or Gods — they feel will get the job done best. ... >Is Lugh Lámhfhada the same being as Lleu Llaw Gyffes? Are Kannon and Guanyin two faces of one God or two separate Gods entirely? The answers are “yes and no,” and that “yes and no” is qualified and far from simple. The relationships might be muddled by different Incarnations working at cross purposes, hostile takeovers of divine Overworlds by other pantheons, Titanic conspiracies to undermine a God’s claim to his Purview, or any number of other complexities — but all myths are true, one way or another.
You have a modern view of myth. Mythos in the greek world is explicitly unreliable, and it's not considered a problem at all. "It's both" is a perfectly reasonable response in this world.
Mason Gonzalez
>Gods spring from the collective belief of Mankind. >There is a version of Thor who can only wield Mjolnir with the iron gloves Járngreipr, There is also the Marvel version of Thor. >Stories of mortal men repeated often enough will result in actual myths. >Herakles was a renowned Greek Warrior. >His fame and stories created Herakles, the son of Zeus.
Jordan Cooper
>There is also the Marvel version of Thor. No. People don't believe in Marvel Thor like the Norse believed in actual Thor.
Carter Rodriguez
If all myths are true, then every single "How to cure X medical condition" myth that has ever been spoken in human history is also true, and that means there is no need for modern medicine at all.
If all myths are true, then all of the debunked myths on Snopes.com are also true, which means that eating six or seven bananas in quick succession will kill someone: snopes.com/food/warnings/bananapotassium.asp
If all myths are true, then all of the debunked myths on Mythbusters are also true, and someone can cause an avalanche by yodeling.
Gavin Cox
Those are urban legends, not mythology. The modern idea of "myth" is not the same as the "myth" that Scion 2e draws from. An "all myths are true" setting is going to inherently be full of contradiction and it will be up to the interpreter to determine what versions of the mythology to work with at any particular time.
Kayden Evans
So not all myths are true after all.
Chase Young
>All snaps are pops >All crackles are pops >Pop minus snap equals crackle
How do I make a world where all of this is true? Huh? Huh? Why can't I make all of it true? When it is inherently conflicting on the logic? The answer has to be "you don't care about it and just say it's all true" or it's "the objective answer comes from the human subjectivity that created myths in the first place". There is no middle ground where somehow you can have broken logic that works flawlessly without such a system.
Nolan James
Usually when people talk about "All Myths are True" settings they mean that a lot of shit from different sources that is thought to be fake IRL turns out to be real in some way, they dont mean it in an absolute way, its an hyperbole.
Aiden Nguyen
Unless you want to exhaustively go through specifying which bits are true, leaving it open to interpretation/accepting that things like absolute fact, time and causality breaks down when it comes to myth is just kinda necessary.