Moon Elf family who doesn’t reclusively keep to the deep forests going to be more “humany” than a Moon family from Evereska?
— 🌈Jaye🦄Em🌹Edgecliff🏳️🌈 (@jayeedgecliff) February 24, 2019
Like humans, elves (and dwarves) seem to have an innate pride/stubbornness that the more flexible (hence, blend in) halflings and gnomes have less of. This will cause elves to try to retain a distinct cultural identity in…#Realmslore 2)
…direct proportion to how threatened/unaccepted/badly treated they feel. They will blend in more with humans who accept them, and stay aloof and proudly ‘elven’ more with humans who treat them like non-humans.#Realmslore— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) February 24, 2019
Moon elves are generally ‘welcomed but exotic’ in Cormyr; i.e. most human Cormyreans will respond to their grace and beauty with smiles and either shyness or friendly converse and aid, so the elves will relax and respond in… # 4)
…kind. If specific moon elves and humans interacting with each other are in close-to-nature settings, they will be more alike because dealing with an environment familiar to both and ‘welcoming’ to both. In an urban setting…#Realmslore— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) February 24, 2019
5)
…where humans are dominant (e.g. Suzail, Marsember, and Arabel) the moon elves will over time become more ‘humany’ to blend in—unless, on an individual level, they feel more threatened/unwelcome; they will respond to such… 6)
…treatment by leaving the setting or being more defiantly ‘elf-like’ (music, dancing, flamboyant dress, filling their personal dwelling-places with not just living plants, but soil and a full-range forest-like growing…#Realmslore— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) February 24, 2019
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…environment—often causing flooding for human dwellers on the floor below, if there are any).#Realmslore— Ed Greenwood (@TheEdVerse) February 24, 2019