The rule could be anything, as funny or as serious as you want. The universe will progress in a similar way that it has up until this point, unless your changed rule prevented it from doing so.

Some examples might be:

  • The invention of currency is not allowed.
  • Iron is slightly less stable.
  • The Ancient Greeks are able to cultivate Silphium, which does not go extinct now.
  • Postmortal_Pop
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    2 months ago
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    I’m going to keep this for when I have to explain non-Euclidean spaces during game night.

    • frank
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      2 months ago
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      I always use Chess boards to describe non-Euclidean spaces when I “need” to (aka when I get even a narrow chance to)

      • Postmortal_Pop
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        2 months ago
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        By all means, explain it to me! My best way so far was siting the chase in call of Cthulhu and really it’s not a great example.

        • frank
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          2 months ago
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          Heck yeah, I’ll try my best!

          So on a euclidian chess board, moving your king one space left would be 1 space, one space up would be 1 space, and one space diagonally would be √2 spaces (some simple trig gets us there).

          Chess however, does not obey the laws of Euclidian geometry nor does its physical representation show us things to scale. A king’s move diagonally is the same amount of space as a move side to side, 1 space.

          It’s silly, because spaces weren’t directly supposed to represent distance or anything, but it’s funny that it works out this way

          • Postmortal_Pop
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            2 months ago
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            This is a problem I’ve always had with Square grids in D&D and it never occured to me that from character perspective a character is warping space to move slightly further for the same amount of movement.

            • frank
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              2 months ago
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              Also non Euclidian! Hexagons (the bestagons) also tesselate and fix that problem nicely