so I have a character in Ravnica that is a female into females and I wanted to know what the worlds view (the world of Ravncia that is) on that kind of thing was. is it like why back when, when it's was not something people liked? are some towns and guilds ok with it? or is it just all good? I need to know for something that happened in her back story
Ravnica, as with all Magic the Gathering settings, is accepting of same sex relationships. In fact there's a canon gay couple in the War of the Spark novel and the only thing they have to worry about is that they're from different guilds, not that they're the same gender.
As a property owned by wotc, much like D&D, MTG strives to inclusive. They have queer, trans, agender and non-binary characters.
Yeah, Ravnica is more inline with Renaissance Italy to Victorian London in terms of development, but with a Eastern European/Slavic aesthetic, but with very modern attitudes.
In the introduction to the Guildmaster's Guide to Ravnica it even highlights that Ravnica is a place full of people from diverse cultures, races, sexual orientations, and gender identities.
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
To post a comment, please login or register a new account.
so I have a character in Ravnica that is a female into females and I wanted to know what the worlds view (the world of Ravncia that is) on that kind of thing was. is it like why back when, when it's was not something people liked? are some towns and guilds ok with it? or is it just all good? I need to know for something that happened in her back story
Ravnica, as with all Magic the Gathering settings, is accepting of same sex relationships. In fact there's a canon gay couple in the War of the Spark novel and the only thing they have to worry about is that they're from different guilds, not that they're the same gender.
As a property owned by wotc, much like D&D, MTG strives to inclusive. They have queer, trans, agender and non-binary characters.
Find my D&D Beyond articles here
Ravnica is a pretty modern setting societally wise.
Yeah, Ravnica is more inline with Renaissance Italy to Victorian London in terms of development, but with a Eastern European/Slavic aesthetic, but with very modern attitudes.
Find my D&D Beyond articles here
In the introduction to the Guildmaster's Guide to Ravnica it even highlights that Ravnica is a place full of people from diverse cultures, races, sexual orientations, and gender identities.