Top products from r/FantasyWorldbuilding

We found 6 product mentions on r/FantasyWorldbuilding. We ranked the 6 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

Next page

Top comments that mention products on r/FantasyWorldbuilding:

u/lightbulbfragment · 3 pointsr/FantasyWorldbuilding

Sorry for the long links but I'm on mobile. I use these. Yes they are intended as dnd monsters but the creatures are very easily adaptable. I'm using these 2 books for inspiration in a dungeon world game at the moment.

Tome of Beasts https://www.amazon.com/dp/1936781565/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_wKGzCbCPJ9KQ8

Creature Codex https://www.amazon.com/dp/1936781921/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_6HGzCbN9F22K2

u/spoonsprite · 1 pointr/FantasyWorldbuilding

I'm looking into how cities work and urban planning. How they decide what goes where and when and how big. I love the idea of how my city works, within its walls and everything, but I need to plan out its inner workings and its streets and neighborhoods to make the peoples fit into it. So I read a lot of things like Life in a Medieval City and I look at maps a lot.

u/MiniMosher · 2 pointsr/FantasyWorldbuilding

With Jung you have his collected works, but this is like taking acid when you haven't even tried weed so its best to start with another persons perspective and work your way in: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0192854585/ref=cm_sw_r_fm_apa_9UjhAbJA5Q2C3

It also helps to look into the context of his life, he was alive during both world wars and a friend (sort of) of Freud. He was really on board with the East-West exchange of philosophy much like Aldous Huxley and the rock artists of the 70s. I think he is the epitome of what hippies would call "far out, dude".

u/Pisceswriter123 · 2 pointsr/FantasyWorldbuilding

https://pantheon.org/

It has myths from all over the world. You'll have to sift through gods and things like that.

Also I found this if you can afford it.