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Jason Duck's avatar

I think the use of fire arms not bring used is that it doesn't have the same sense of honour. Welding a sword takes more skill and practice than pulling a trigger and is a reflection of character as the sword bearer has probally put in more hours to be skilled in using that weapon compared to a gun handler. Star Wars did it brilliantly as Lucas had the Force which is basically magic, laser guns and lightscabers. Lightscabers were from a by gone era and laser weapons were the more go to weapon of choice for the average person. So in that way fantasy writers could put guns alongside swords and it wouldn't be out of place. I think it would work in a Renaissance setting but would be a hard Sell in a medieval setting even though it maybe historically accurate it wouldn't feel right to most readers.

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The Brothers Krynn's avatar

I appreciate your perspective and will even compliment your essay though I will defend the decision not to include them by saying that the decision not to include them for me stems from a love for the pre-modern, for the ancient and that my world is meant to be akin to Tolkien's just for the French and Scots and Japanese, and to be a 'faerie-world' a place that exists in the pre-flood era and is in some stories more Classical period (Greco-Roman) or Medieval (8th-early14th centuries), deliberately because I wish to avoid gunpowder.

I wish to create a mythology, a fairy-tale Great Romance or series of Romances. Gunpowder would interfere with the sense of the other-worldly.

But I think more and more authors are doing what you've suggested and that that's fine, it is also quite neat and important that every author chart their own course.

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