What kind of druidcraft can get a pumpkin to grow like that? Also, does Magus have to flash people to put on that shirt-mask? Also-also, storing spiders for the holidays is a brilliant way to solve the perpetual giant-rats-in-the-cellar problem that most fantasy settings seem to have. It may be frivolous nonsense to worry about any of the above when major plot points are in the offing. But then again, it’s almost as if there’s more fun stuff going on in the world than any single threat.

This just happened in my E6-West-Marches-PF1e-Hex-Crawl-in-the-Weird-West campaign. Our heroic homesteaders had just survived a descent into the depths below. A network of teleportation circles known as The Fateways had been opened. My gunslinger/inquisitor had been knighted, visited by a vision of her goddess, and charged with putting a stop to the setting’s evil dwarven railroad barons. Epic events were afoot! Daring action was required! We went to a corn maze!

oneOfTheseThings.exe

It’s not just Handbook-World getting ready for the spooky season. While Inquisitor and Magus are busy with spider decor, the inhabitants of Hold the Sun are prepping for harvest time. The festival grounds of our sleepy little western town are full of tents and artisans and pumpkin vines. Ring toss and test-your-strength hammers and dance floors are all set up. The local mages are busy enchanting our aforementioned corn maze, and bonfires fill the air will a pleasant wood smoke. You see, carnival sessions don’t care about world-shaking events. They just happen anyway.

My point is simply that verisimilitude demands more than staying on theme. Sure there are armies marching, dark lords stirring, and revelations being unveiled. But that isn’t the only thing going on in the background of your setting. Common folk and kings alike have different things to worry about than your heroes, and it is occasionally good practice to give them the spotlight. That’s for the simple reason that worlds need breathing room. If it’s only ever THE QUEST, even the most epic of storylines can begin to feel claustrophobic, reducing a rich tapestry to a single thread. Giving those other elements their fair share of attention is far from frivolous. It is necessary for the health and well-being of a living world.

Therefore! For today’s discussion, what do you say we brainstorm a few “meanwhile scenarios?” The party are concerned about ____, but the NPCs are busy with ____ instead. Whether the first blank is full of wizards or peasants or courtesans, and whether the second blank is full of sorcerer’s apprentice SATs or small-town elections or half off low-cut corset sales, tell us what the rest of your setting is worried about down in the comments!