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Medieval and steampunk overused?

  • Thread starter Deleted member 4379
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Deleted member 4379

Guest
Hi!

So as many people have noticed, around 90% of fantasy is based on medieval times. The rest are either steampunk-ish or trying to be modern. I haven't really seen any good novels with any other type of world than those.
I'm kinda new here, so has there been any good inventions other than those? I personally think that around 1600-1700's where the colonization of America began, the times were way more modern than medieval. Has anyone really written anything similar to those times? I haven't seen anything.

So when creating new stories (an idea) I think new fields should be explored by changing the "world-type" and age.
What do you guys think? Which times would be the best for fantasy, other than medieval?
 

Ireth

Myth Weaver
Chronicles of Ancient Darkness (can't remember the author) is a good series based well before the medieval era; I'm tempted to say Stone Age, but it's been a while since I actually read the books.

EDIT: Also, the Discworld series seems to take place before and up to the Industrial Revolution (at least in Ankh-Morpork). Several of the books revolve around inventions like the printing press, paper money and trains, which are a lot better than they sound.
 
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Drakevarg

Troubadour
I try, for the most part, to avoid medieval stasis (the phenomena in many fantasy settings to remain at roughly the same stage technologically for thousands of years) by having a timeline to work with. So if I wish I can set my story anywhere between Stone Age and early Industrial Revolution (roughly speaking) within the same setting without it contradicting itself.

That said, I think the call to bygone eras is part of the escapism of fantasy. Modern comforts are simply too familiar for the audience and there's a decided sense of adventure in being thrown from that. Of course, it backfires when everybody sets their story in roughly the same era simply out of genre convention, which can either speak to a lack of originality or a desire to use the mild paradox of a familiar-yet-fantastical scenario to explore new ideas, depending on the author. A similar phenomena can be seen in the flood of zombie fiction out there.

And while personally I'm beyond sick to death of zombie stories, I won't deny that sometimes it works. The same applies to medieval fantasy. It's not about being original, it's about being interesting. Originality is overrated.
 

Ireth

Myth Weaver
And while personally I'm beyond sick to death of zombie stories, I won't deny that sometimes it works. The same applies to medieval fantasy. It's not about being original, it's about being interesting. Originality is overrated.

I wonder if anyone's tried to write a zombie story set in the medieval era... It'd be easy to do with a necromancer involved!
 

skip.knox

toujours gai, archie
Moderator
*Everything* is overused, yet we don't stop writing, do we? Even complaining about things being overused is overused.

Other eras? There's a ton of fantasy set in ancient Rome or Greece or Egypt. A bunch more in Renaissance times. Then there's Naomi Novik and her Napoleonic dragons. Scads more set in China or Japan.

IOW, yes, there are lots. I long for Amazon and other entities to categorize fantasy by setting and era rather than--or, at least in addition to--categories by theme.
 

WooHooMan

Auror
I tend to gravitate towards sci-fantasy. I'm also into Chinese and Indian media so Asian-based settings are nothing new to me.
And, of course, I'd say modern day fantasy and magical realism are way more common than steampunk.

What I'm getting at is that fantasy isn't nearly as same-y as you think. You just have to dig deeper. Avoid the Tolkien-lite, high fantasy sub genre and eventually, you won't even notice it.
 

Incanus

Auror
I'm with Skip here. I don't believe there is any type of setting, or even a catagory of setting, that is overused. The idea is to make it your own. By the time you've added in a fresh cast of characters, a theme, a twist on magic or on monsters, an unusual combination of plot bits, a prose style, or any number of other custom details, you should have something relatively 'original'.

How about asking: what is an under-used setting? Are there any? I can't think of one off the top of my head.
 

Drakevarg

Troubadour
Depends on what you mean by "underused." Certainly I'd like to see, say, South American mythology or voodoo-type stuff used more, but at the same time I can think of a handful of examples that make use of those themes at least in passing.
 
Ireth -

I have zombies that are created through an incubation type process that takes place in pods that are submerged beneath the water of this swamp. :)
 
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Incanus

Auror
Depends on what you mean by "underused."

Nothing very specific, really. The point was to show that 'overused' and 'underused' settings are not actually that helpful in trying to decide what kind of story to develop. At least not for me.
 
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Deleted member 4379

Guest
I just realized that there aren't that many fantasy stories based on Africa/Australia-like worlds. In a nutshell, a medieval-zombie-adventure in Africa would be pretty darn cool.
 

Mythopoet

Auror
I've talked to people who say they wish there was more medieval fantasy, so it really depends on your point of view.
 
Promise of Blood is set with colonial era tech. Alloy of Law, Shadows of Self and Bands of Mourning are all wild Wild West era. But I'm with you there is a stigma of medieval fantasy. I have three separate WIPs I'm working on. One is far future fantasy, another is I would say near Renaissance, and the last is roaring twenties.
 
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