Land of the Shattered Empire

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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A common element of an Adventure-Friendly World is that the setting is set upon the ruins of a now defunct empire. This allows creating a world without a central authority to solve problems, and several factions willing to wage war (either open or espionage) on one another, while maintaining several conveniences one would spawn such as a common language, and a shared history, as well as allowing for now international institutions, standards and/or road networks (which are often in disrepair and plagued by bandits). One or more of the factions may claim continuity with the old empire.

Examples of Land of the Shattered Empire include:

Advertising

Anime and Manga

Ballads

Comic Books

Fan Works

Film

Literature

Live-Action TV

Music

New Media

Newspaper Comics

Oral Tradition, Folklore, Myths and Legends

Pinball

Podcasts

Professional Wrestling

Puppet Shows

Radio

Recorded and Stand Up Comedy

Tabletop Games

  • Eberron is set a few years after most of the countries that used to make up the Empire of Galifar have finally made an uneasy peace following one of them being destroyed overnight in mysterious circumstances. Galifar left behind standardized coinage and (now unenforceable) agreement of checks and balances on the Dragonmark Houses, though railways, major roads, the primary language, and many other institutions are attributed to the still extant Dragonmark Houses. Since the Five Nations can't move militarily without fear of breaking the truce, Sealed Evil in A Can and other international threats must be solved by the player characters.
  • Points of Light is set a hundred years after the fall of the Empire of Nerath. Now the mightiest factions friendly to humanity left are mere city states who struggle to project power beyond their walls and hire mercenaries to deal with all manner of external issue. Nerath has left behind vast ruins filled with treasure and a single language, and is presumably responsible for the standardized gold pieces as well.

Theatre

Video Games

  • The Calradic Empire of Mount & Blade has been gone for a few hundred years leaving behind several factions who all claim to have a historical right to the rest of the former empire (and thus reason to wage on/off war with their neighbors). Naturally it's up to the player to do something about this. The prequel, Bannerlord, is set just as the empire has split from a Succession Crisis and its former tributaries have broken off.

Visual Novels

Web Animation

Web Comics

Web Original

Western Animation

Other Media

Real Life

Eras that count when used for Historical Fiction