Hey /tg/! In the future, I want to run a campaign based off of traditional fairy tales and folk tales from various European cultures. Do any of you have any good online databases of those?
Beside just opening it Grimm's, Andersen's or Lang's what are you concerned with?
>>51989215
I'm want to have most of the monsters be something from fairy tales and so far I have a very small list of possible monsters:
Giants (from Jack and the Beanstalk)
Trolls (from 3 Billy Goats Gruff)
Ogres (from Puss in Boots)
Dragons (from The Two Brothers)
>>51988869
I kinda want to do this, except with a more pic-related vibe. Not so much using straight fairy/folk tales, but run as one.
>>51989602
I've never watched Over the Garden Wall but if I may make a suggestion for a fairy tale campaign: think of what sort of things amazed you as a kid and try to fill it with those things that give you a childlike sense of wonder.
>>51988869
You won't find a better database than wikipedia and just googling your folk tales of choice. Google 'polish folk tale' or 'traditional fairy tales', etc. Really, there's not a necessity for a database when it's just a few taps away.
>>51989469
fairy tales rarely feature elaborated races.
A gnome town like in Rumpelstiltskin is the most out of there thing you will find
BTW add Jinns/ifrits to your list, the arabian nights have tons of those and they're all fantastic
>>51989939
Over the Garden Wall isn't about that but it feels like that, Just two kids lost in the forest stumbling upon humble marvels