Quote Originally Posted by Lord_Zlatan View Post
(an excellent post)
Seriously <3

We have this habit of associating fantasy cultures with a very few select "Hollywood" historical settings. FF14 takes some refreshing steps outside those boundaries, which is a trait it shares with a lot of good genre fantasy pieces, while keeping some core flavors, mostly of the European and Asian variety, intact.

I'm still in love with how they chose to place one of the most memorable recent story segments in a Mongolia-inspired region, because that's a place that tends to go severely under-utilized in these kinds of stories as anything other than a cheap and predictable go-to for "foreign invading horde" type antagonists.

"Hollywood" or no, though, I do look forward to whenever we get an expansion with Thavnair in it that's gonna just be a ridiculous feast of Arabian-Nightsy goodness.

Note on Doma and Hingashi: They can both be seen as fully representative of Japan, but during very different time periods. Doma reflects the war-torn Sengoku era, while Hingashi (or Kugane, at least) is the more cosmopolitan Meiji Restoration. Or something close to those effects, anyway. It's a little bit like how Gridania and Ishgard are 100% Europe, but Gridania's a pagan culture of antiquity, while Ishgard is all about the High Middle Ages.

Tangentially, the inclusion of Rabanastre in FFXIV reminds one of it's original incarnation in FFXII: An imagining of a Mesopotamian city-state advanced to a Renaissance-parallel.